A Lesson In Humanity : Dr. Martin Luther King

Transcription

A Lesson In Humanity : Dr. Martin Luther King
http://www.tucsonobserver.com
WEEKLY OBSERVER
JANUARY 18, 2006
Flu Virus Joins HIV
In Resisting Drugs
ATLANTA - The government, for
the first time, is urging doctors not to
prescribe two antiviral drugs commonly
used to fight influenza after discovering
that the predominant strain of the virus
has built up high levels of resistance to
them at alarming speed, reported the
Associated Press on 365Gay.com.
A whopping 91 percent of virus
samples tested by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention this flu
season proved resistant to rimantadine
and amantadine, a huge increase since
last year, when only 11 percent were.
The discovery adds to worries about
how to fight bird flu should it start
spreading among people. Health officials had hoped to conserve use of two
newer antiviral drugs, Tamiflu and
Relenza, because they show activity
against bird flu, unlike the older drugs.
Now, because of the resistance
issue, the newer drugs are being
recommended for ordinary flu, increasing the chances that resistance will
develop more rapidly to them, too, as
they become more commonly used. The
newer drugs work against Type A and B
influenza strains; the older ones work
only against Type A, but cost less and
are available in generic form.
CDC officials took the unusual
step of calling a Saturday news
conference to announce that the
predominant strain this season - the
type A H3N2 influenza strain - was
resistant to the older drugs. “Clinicians
should not use rimantadine and amantadine ... because the drugs will not be
effective,” said CDC director Dr. Julie
Gerberding. She said the lab tests,
which CDC scientists had been analyzing since Friday (Jan. 13), surprised
health officials and the health agency
rushed to get the word out. “I don’t think
we were expecting it to be so dramatic
so quickly this year,” Gerberding said.
“We just didn’t feel it was responsible to
wait three more days during a holiday
weekend to let clinicians know.”
The CDC tested 120 influenza
A virus samples from the H3N2 strain
and found that 109 were resistant to the
two drugs. Two years ago, less than 2
percent of the samples were resistant.
Last year, 11 percent were. Gerberding
said the agency didn’t know how the
resistance occurred, saying it may have
been the result of a mutation in the virus
or overuse of the drugs abroad, such as
in countries that permit the drugs to be
purchased without a prescription.
One flu expert, Dr. William
Schaffner of Vanderbilt University, said
the development was “disconcerting” as
flu now has joined the ranks of other
diseases, such as tuberculosis and HIV,
that recently have acquired the ability to
resist front-line medications. But
Schaffner said doctors have other
options to fight influenza.
ISSUE 1122
A Lesson In Humanity :
Dr. Martin Luther King
The CDC said that all H3 and
H1 influenza viruses the agency has
tested so far are susceptible to the
newer antivirals: Tamiflu, also known
as oseltamivir, and Relenza, also
called zanamivir. Doctors also recommend an annual flu shot to help
prevent getting influenza in the first
place.
“Tamiflu is now readily available everywhere _ in most places, it is
the primary antiviral being used”
against flu, Schaffner said. “But we’re
always a bit frustrated when one of the
therapeutic agents is foreclosed. It
makes every infectious disease doctor worry a little bit.”
That’s especially worry with
fears that bird flu could become turn
into a human epidemic. The bird flu
spreading through Asia infects people
relatively rarely, but officials worry
that it might morph into a form that
spreads more easily, triggering a
worldwide super-flu outbreak. The
CDC said it planned to alert doctors
throughout the country via its emergency Health Alert Network and
through a special edition of its weekly
journal, the Morbidity and Mortality
Weekly Report.
Each year, the flu kills about
36,000 people, and some 200,000 are
hospitalized because of it in the United
States, the CDC said. As of Dec. 31,
the latest CDC data available, flu
activity was only considered widespread in seven U.S. states, mainly in
the Southwest and West: Texas, New
Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Utah,
Nevada and California.
NGLTF Gets
$3-Million Grant
SUMMARY: The LGBT rights
movement hit a fund-raising milestone
as the National Gay and Lesbian Task
Force Foundation announced it received a $3 million grant for its
advocacy work.
The award, to be spread over
three years, comes from the Arcus
Foundation and its founder and
president, Jon Stryker, task force
officials said Tuesday (Jan. 10)
“This combined award of $3
million by Mr. Stryker and the Arcus
Foundation will make a huge difference to the LGBT movement at the
state and local level,” said task force
Executive Director Matt Foreman.
“Not only is it the largest award ever
Continued on Page Thirteen
by Julian High and Donna Payne
By the Most of America’s five major U.S. cities, of African-American
greatest heroes never make it out of the men who have sex with men, almost half
shadows. Martin Luther King Jr. are living with HIV. And two-thirds of them
certainly was not one of them. But as don’t know it.
we celebrate one of our greatest
Our brothers and sisters are
American heroes this weekend (Jan.
14 - 15), we should follow Dr. King’s being decimated by this disease. But it’s
own vision by not looking toward the not the disease that’s killing us. It’s our
silence. Yes, our government could do
spotlight but toward the ordinary.
more, but we must be a part of the
It’s not the people making solution.
headlines who will have the greatest
Dr. King spoke up. And the
affect on our freedom, but the people in
our own backyards who can shape the essence of his speaking wasn’t about
politics. It was humanity. When he made
future.
his most famous speech, he didn’t dream
Take Dr. King himself, a man of passing legislation. He dreamt of the
who found peace in conflict through sons of former slaves and the sons of
conversations with his friends and former slave owners sitting down tofamily. While many of us now know of gether. He dreamt of people.
Gay civil rights leader Bayard Rustin’s
And he never lost hope. As we
vital role in organizing the March on
Washington, it’s less known that before look ahead as at the coming year, we
he ever became a historical figure, must never lose hope.
Rustin helped shape Dr. King’s
It’s past time to break down the
commitment to pacifism.
divisions that exist in America. We must
Rustin didn’t introduce a bill or look at each other’s differences not as
organize a petition drive to let Dr. King walls that keep us apart but as bricks that
know his feelings about non-violence. make our foundation stronger. And we
must start in our own backyards.
He talked to him.
We shouldn’t ignore political
acts, or the people who make
headlines. But too often we ignore how
our own voices can shape the
discussion.
Sunday (Jan. 15) would have
been Dr. King’s 77th birthday. Let’s
salute Dr. King by raising our voices.
The new year comes with a
new set of goals. At the Human Rights
Campaign, one of our goals is to use
our voices to talk to our neighbors, our
friends, our family, our co-workers and
our fellow churchgoers. We’re going to
talk about our commitment to Gay,
Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender
equality. We’re going to do this when
the opportunity presents itself, but
we’re also going to create those
opportunities ourselves.
We must raise our voices
because by not doing so we are putting
ourselves at great risk.
This year, the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention released some startling new statistics. In
Dr. King assured us that we all
belonged to the struggle for equality and
dignity. No matter the color of our skin, the
gender we identify as, the faith we hold
dear or the person we love, we are all
each others’ brothers and sisters.
We have a political fight coming
up in 2006. But it’s not going to be won by
polls and message points. It’s going to be
won by us shaking the hand of the
candidate and talking. Telling her what we
care about. Finding out if we have a
connection. And, if she does, then it will
be won by us talking to our family about
her, our friends and our neighbors.
It’s time we stopped being
frustrated when our enemies are in the
spotlight and started to put the spotlight
on the heroes we want to be seen. And it’s
up to us to find those people, to help them
get there and to say to ourselves with
great satisfaction, “Yes, I may be in the
shadows, but I am doing my part.”
[Julian High is the Human Rights
Campaign’s Director of Diversity, and
Donna Payne is a Senior Constituency
PAGE TWO
JANUARY 18, 2006
WEEKLY OBSERVER
In Memoriam
TIHAN Update
TUCSON - Do you like the
satisfaction of doing a good job that
enables others to work more efficiently? Then consider joining Tucson
Interfaith HIV/AIDS Network’s (TIHAN)
team of database input volunteers.
The project: Maintain database by entering update information,
entering information for new entries,
adjusting family and organization
entries as situations change, and
tracking people’s group memberships.
Approximately 2 - 4 hours per week,
based on times you are available. The
qualifications: General knowledge of
how adatabase works, detail-oriented,
ability to maintain confidentiality, and
willingness to attend an upcoming
TIHAN volunteer training session.
If you enjoy working quietly,
are detail-oriented, type accurately,
and can follow the same input methods
as other team members, this may be
the opportunity for you! Call Leslie
Johnson, TIHAN Administrative Assistant, (520) 299-6647. . . .
TIHAN has begun a walk-in
volunteer opportunity for anyone who is
interested in helping out for an hour or
two in the evening! Starting in January,
every Thursday evening from 5:30
p.m.- 8:00 p.m., TIHAN will be
welcoming volunteers at the office to
help with mailings, event planning,
volunteer coordination, and more!
TIHAN is inviting anyone who finds it
easier to volunteer in the evening to
consider this opportunity. Since so
many people are tied up with work and
school during the day, our staff is
extending our office hours for Thursday
nights to make it more convenient for
people to begin to get involved and
volunteer.
Please call the office (520)
299-6647, if you are planning on
coming in on a given Thursday (and if
you know Excel, Publisher, or Outlook,
let them know that you are coming so
that we can set up a special project for
you). Drop in, meet some new friends,
and help out TIHAN for an hour or two!
Snacks provided.
Medical Forum Jan. 26
TUCSON - Do you think your
doctor is open and knowledgeable of
LGBT people’s needs, open and not
knowledgeable of LGBT people’s
needs, closed and judgmental and
disinterested - believing that sexual
orientation and gender identity are
irrelevant to one’s health?
Coming out to your Doctor
could be an essential step in receiving
the accurate health care that you need
and deserve and on Jan. 26, 6 - 8 p.m.
at Wingspan, 425 E. 7th St., join
Wingspan’s Serina Preciado, Bilingual
Health Educator and Ed Ware, Anti-
Violence Project Advocate / Educator,
and Dr. Dexter, our ally and local
physician for this important forum and
explore, in a safe and supportive
environment, about the pros and cons
and process of coming out to your
doctor.
For more information, call
Serina Preciado, (520) 624-1779, ext.
25, E-mail: [email protected].
LGBT People Of Color
Coalition Forming
TUCSON - The LGBT People of
Color Coalition will meet monthly to
discuss social justice, political change,
creating coalitions, building solidarity
within our communities, and preventing the divisions that happen when we
experience multiple, intersecting oppressions.
The First Meeting will take
place Sunday Jan. 22, from 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. in the Anzaldúa room at
Wingspan, 425 East 7th St.
For more information, please
contact Angie Rose at (520) 6900546.
Observer Archives
Completely On-Line
TUCSON (ON) - The Observer
archive, after a technical delay has
now been completed uploaded and is
online at tucsonobserver.com/
archives.html.
Who would have thought the
delay dealt with Y2K? It wasn’t the
supposed computer glitch that was to
screw up the computers at the turn of
the millennium (2000) but a delay with
the file for The Observer for the year
2000.
After the delay, Observer Y2K
is now online for your review. The
management and staff wishes to
express its thanks to Mighty Mouse
Consulting for creating, uploading and
maintaining the archive, as well as the
website.
A big thanks goes out to the
LGBT and HIV/AIDS communities,
organizations and businesses, who
contributed funds to make this a
reality, so that Tucson’s LGBT and
HIV/AIDS history can be preserved for
now and the future. So enjoy the
archive, complete going back to 1976!
GLBT Issues
Commission Update
TUCSON - The City of Tucson
Commission on Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Issues needs
you! The GLBT Commission is a group
of individuals who advise the Mayor
and Council on local, state, and
national issues affecting our community.
Continued next column
Scott Alan Childress
Born August 16, 1965 in
Fairbanks, Alaska, died January 14,
2006. Survived by life partner, Joseph
Roos; parents Stephen and JoAnn
Childress; sisters Theresa Harrington
(Jim), son John, Stephanie Shire,
children Chelsea, Devan and Braden,
and Stacey Yeager (Wes), daughter
Sarah; aunt Judy Hines (Tom) and
family; aunts Linda, Lorraine, and
Gina (Lloyd); and Cousins Dan and
Patrick.
Scott graduated from Catalina
High School, Tucson in 1983. Attended University of Arizona and
University of Phoenix, where he
graduated with his Masters degree in
2003. He worked for Ratheon for the
past five years as a computer
engineer.
Scott was loved and will be
remembered by his numerous relatives and friends. Funeral services
6:00 p.m., Thursday, January 19,
2006 at Streams in the Desert
Lutheran Church, 5360 E. Pima St.,
with Pastor Tom Dunham officiating.
Reception to follow at 5512 E. Spring
Street.
The family requests donations
be made to the Scott Childress
Computer Science Scholarship Fund,
% Presidio School, 1695 E. Ft. Lowell
Road, Tucson, AZ 85719.
Friends may call from 6:00 to
9:00 p.m. Wednesday, January 18 at
Bring’s Broadway Chapel, 6910 E.
Broadway.
P.O. BOX 50733,
TUCSON, AZ 85703
(520) 622-7176 (Voice)
(520) 792-8382 (Fax)
Compu(520)ter FAX ()792-8382
Office Hours: 9a.m.-6p.m.M-F
Com
ComOffice
Office Closed Thursdays
792-8382puter FAX (520)792-8382
Observer on the World Wide Web :
www.tucsonobserver.com
[email protected]
——————————
EDITOR/PUBLISHER:
Bob Ellis
ARTS & GRAPHICS:
Gary Clark
MANAGING EDITOR:
Mark Kerr
E-Mail:
Special Events Photos:
Bill Morrow
Amanda Irvine
Horoscope:
In addition to working with the
City to implement and enforce its nondiscrimination policy, the GLBT Commission was instrumental in drafting
Tucson’s Domestic Partner Registry
and educates groups such as the
Tucson Police Department and TUSD
teachers on GLBT issues. Come
voice your opinion, share your
thoughts, and get involved in your
Commission.
Commission meetings are
the third Tuesday of each month at
5:30 p.m., in the EOO Conference
Room - 100 North Stone Avenue, first
floor.
Visit
us
at
www.tucsonglbtcommission.org or Email Melissa Noshay Petro with any
q u e s t i o n s :
[email protected].
Charlene Lichtenstein
Contributing Columnists
MARK R. KERR - LEE THORN
JERRY DIAZ
*
Publication of names or photos of any person
or organization in the OBSERVER is not to be
construed as indication of the sexual
orientation of such person, organization or
advertisers or any employees thereof.
Opinions that are expressed in Letters to the
Editor or columns by contributors are not
necessarily those of the OBSERVER, its staff
or advertisers. OBSERVER assumes
responsibility for its own editorial policy only.
Although OBSERVER has many fine
advertisers, we do not accept responsibility
for any claims made pertaining to their
products and/or services.
*
Permission to reprint (except for separately
copyrighted material) is granted when credit
is given to the OBSERVER.
WEEKLY OBSERVER
JANUARY 18, 2006
PAGE THREE
Why ‘Brokeback Mountaiin’ Is So Frightening
By Leonard Pitts Jr.
I went to see “Brokeback
Mountain,” mainly to prove to myself
that I could.
This was after reading a New
York Times piece by Larry David of
“Seinfeld” and “Curb Your Enthusiasm” fame in which he wrote that,
though he loves Gay people and
supports both Gay marriage and Gay
divorce, he does not plan to see this
critically praised movie about Gay
cowboys. David said he’s discomfited
by the idea of watching two men fall in
love and fears it might make him Gay
by osmosis.
“Not,” he added, “that there’s
anything wrong with that.”
It strikes me that David’s
essay amounted to the smiley-face
liberal version of what is being said
more bluntly in conservative circles.
“Gay love story carries a high “ick’
factor” reads the headline of a story on
the American Family Association Web
site. It quotes a prediction that people
will leave the theater vomiting.
How asinine, I think.
Yeah, says a little voice in my
head, but if that’s how you feel, why
haven’t YOU been to “Brokeback
Mountain”?
But didn’t you drive that far to see
“Good Night, and Good Luck”?
Now look, I say, and suddenly
there’s this wheedling tone to my
voice, some of my best friends are
Gay. Heck, my own brother’s Gay. But
you know, we ARE talking about a love
story between two guys, and they
might be kissing and, you know,
touching and ... stuff.
The little voice falls silent. It is
a put-your-money-where-your-mouthis silence.
So I went to see “Brokeback.”
And I can report that it was as
shattering and powerful as advertised.
People were moved. Nobody threw up.
Which brings me back to that
ick factor.
I find myself wondering if this
primeval revulsion doesn’t speak less
to our antipathy toward homosexuality
than to our fears about masculinity. I
mean, while a movie about two women
in love would surely be controversial, I
doubt it would present the visceral
threat “Brokeback Mountain” does for
some of us. I doubt Larry David would
be scared to see it.
Well, I protest, right now I’m
teaching in this tiny college town in the
middle of nowhere. I’d have to drive 90
miles.
Indeed, the idea of women
who can’t keep their hands off each
other is a staple of so-called men’s
entertainment. Visit a magazine stand
if you don’t believe me. In the ’80s, it
seemed as if every Prince video had
band members Lisa and Wendy
groping each other.
Good point, says the voice.
Point being, when it’s women,
we - meaning straight men - tend to find
it titillating, exotic, arousing in its very
forbiddance. When it’s men, we meaning straight men AND women tend to react as if somebody dropped a
snake in the bed. Small wonder the FBI
reports that while 902 men were
reported victims of sexual orientation
hate crimes in 2004, ONLY 212
women were.
We seem prone to find male
homosexuality the more clear and
present danger, the more urgent
betrayal of some fundamental ...
something. Some will say it’s - and I
will finesse this for a general audience
- the nature of man-to-man sex some of
us find off-putting. I think it’s more
basic than that. I think Gay men
threaten our very conception of
masculinity.
The amazing thing about
“Brokeback Mountain” is its willingness to make that threat, directly and
overtly. These are not cute Gays,
funny Gays, “Queer Eye for the
Straight Guy” Gays. These are
“cowboys,” and there is no figure in
American lore more iconically male.
Think Clint Eastwood, John Wayne,
the Marlboro Man. The cowboy is our
very embodiment of male virtues.
In offering us cowboys who
are Gay, then, “Brokeback Mountain”
commits heresy, but it is knowing
heresy, matter-of-fact heresy. Nor is it
the sex (what little there is) that makes
it heretical. Rather, it’s the emotion, the
fact that the movie dares you to deny
these men their humanity. Or their
love.
Ultimately, I think, that’s what
the Larry Davids among us sense. And
why for them, “Brokeback Mountain”
might be the most frightening movie
ever made.
[Leonard Pitts is a columnist
for the Miami Herald, from which this
article is reprinted.]
Girl Expelled Over
Same-Sex Kiss
Files Suit
LOGANSVILLE - A private school
is facing a $1 million lawsuit after
school authorities expelled a ninth
grader for kissing another girl during a
slumber party, reported the PlanetOut
Network.
Jessica Bradley was ejected
from the Covenant Christian Academy
for showing “disregard for the spirit of
the school standards,” after word of the
kiss filtered up to the school’s principal
last spring. According to press reports
of the complaint, Jessica’s father,
Ronald Bradley, sued the school for
invasion of privacy and breach of
contract, arguing that the school
reneged on its promise to educate his
daughter in exchange for tuition.
The school delivered its answer to the Gwinnett County Superior
Court, maintaining that the religiousbased decisions of a Christian school
are not subject to judicial review. But
speaking to the Associated Press,
Bradley’s lawyer, David Clark, said
that the Constitution’s guarantee of
religious freedom “does not give [the
school directors] the absolute right to
act how they wish to act.”
Continued on Page Eighteen
PAGE FOUR
WEEKLY OBSERVER
JANUARY 18, 2006
OUToberfest And
Pride Parade
Figures Released
By Mark R. Kerr
TUCSON (ON) - Between 56,000 GLBT and straight supportive
Tucsonans
turned
out
for
OUToberFEST, as well as 1,000
onlookers took in the annual Pride
Parade, according to Tucson Pride
figures obtained by The Observer.
“OUToberFEST 2005 was
another successful year, thanks to the
ongoing support and enthusiasm of
Tucson’s LGBT community,” said
Nancy Robinett of Tucson Pride.
She went on to state that, “A
special thanks to Arnette Miller, our
outgoing Board President, for her
years of hard work, and her commitment to making this another good
year,” adding that “approximately 100
business vendors, including many
vendors from the local LGBT community had booths at OUToberFEST.”
Matt Harding, chair of the
Pride Parade Committee said this
year’s Pride Parade had a three-fold
increase of floats from the previous
year, with 25 LGBT organizations,
associations and businesses, as well
as 150 individual participants taking
part in the parade along the Fourth
Avenue route.
According to the audit conducted after the events, OUToberFEST
brought in $86,720 in total revenue,
including in-kind donations of $9,390.
Expenses totaled about $75,886,
including a net loss from our Gay Wet
event in June and an outstanding
invoice.
Tucson Pride additionally contributed $3,042 to local charities in our
Volunteer for Dollars program tied to
OUToberFEST and $1,000 to the
Habitat for Humanity Rainbow Build.
The Pride Parade took in
$9,918 in revenue and spent $8,392,
leaving $1,526 as money to begin work
on next year’s event, the audit showed.
If you would like to participate
in Tucson Pride’s events, such as
OUToberFEST or the Pride Parade for
this coming year, please visit Tucson
Pride’s website, www.tucsonpride.com
or call the Pride Line, (520) 622-3200
and leave a message.
Native American
LGBT & Two Spirit
Group Forming
TUCSON - Are you Native
American and identify as Lesbian,
Gay, Bisexual, Transgender or TwoSpirit?
The time has come to establish a group here in Tucson to promote
our ethnic beauty, to educate the
public about our traditional culture, and
unite to advocate for our social issues.
Please join in, Monday Jan.
23, 6 p.m., at Wingspan, 425 E. 7th St.,
if you would like to be a part of our first
meeting and help develop the mission/
vision of your new Tucson Native
American LGBT group.
For more information, contact
Jeanette, [email protected].
WEEKLY OBSERVER
A Passionate Affair
Feb. 4
TUCSON - Think romance and
passion, with plenty of elegance, lots
of great music, and fabulous shopping,
and you’ll be envisioning “A Passionate Affair,” with Desert Voices, Tucson’s
Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender
and Straight chorus, who present their
annual Silent Auction fund raiser
complete with cabaret style entertainment, just in time for Valentine’s Day
gift giving, Saturday, Feb. 4, 6:30 p.m.,
at the Historic Y, 300 E. University.
In addition to enjoying beer,
wine and champagne from the open
bar and some tantalizing hors d’
oeuvres and sweets, guests will find
items such as ticket to “The Flying
Dutchman” from the Arizona Opera, a
stay at Casa de San Pedro B&B, dinner
and theatre ticket packages, amazing
jewelry from The Turquoise Door,
freshly baked home-made pies, a
beautiful rug from the Indian Rug
Outlet, and gift baskets for beach
lovers, chocolate lovers, wine lovers
and martini lovers, just to mention a
few. In addition, the chorus is raffling
off an ipod nano the night of the event.
Tickets are available for $5 each, or 5
tickets for $20 and can be purchased
by calling the Desert Voices office, or
contacting any member of the chorus.
The winning ticket will be drawn at the
event, but winner need not be present
to win.
Tickets are $20 and can be
purchased in advance by calling the
Desert Voices office at (520)791-9662
or at Antigone Books, 411 N 4th Ave, or
at the door if available.
More information is available
on the Desert Voices website,
desertvoices.org, so make your plans
now to get in the mood for love by
taking part in “A Passionate Affair,”
and tickets are limited, so don’t delay!
Wingspan AntiViolence Project
Training Jan. 21
TUCSON - The Wingspan AntiViolence Project offers a free, amazing
three-day volunteer training, Jan. 21, 9
a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
At the end of these three days
you will be able to: identify local
community resources for people in
crisis, be a more effective communicator and listener in all your relationships, feel comfortable doing crisis
intervention work, and learn more
about the issues facing Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual, and Transgender people
including domestic violence, sexual
violence, hate crimes, harassment and
discrimination. he training also offers
cultural competency training in Latino,
Transgender, and LGB issues and the
opportunity to learn about the various
agencies AVP works with. Following
the training you will be given the
opportunity to become a much-needed
volunteer on the Anti-Violence Project
24-hour crisis line. Volunteering requires committing to a minimum of one
night per month.
In order to volunteer, you must
attend all three days of the training and
seating is limited, so contact Ed Ware,
E-mail: [email protected] or (520)
624-1779, ext. 20, to sign up or for
more information.
JANUARY 18, 2006
Lucie Blue Tremblay
In Concert Feb. 5
Lucie Blue Tremblay
TUCSON - Lucie Blue Tremblay,
internationally-touring
singer/
songwriter, brings her music to Tucson
on Sunday, Feb. 5, 6:30 P.M., at the
Water of Life MCC, 3269 N. Mountain
Ave.
This concert is a fundraiser for
The
Breast
Exam
Project
(www.thebreastexamproject.org), an
endeavor she began while helping her
sister through chemotherapy.
Tickets for the event are $15 in
advance and $20 at the door. They are
available at Antigone Books, 411 N.
4th Ave. and Water of Life MCC, 3269
N. Mountain Ave. For more information, call Julie Nicolay of Outloud
Productions at (520) 780-3605.
Transgender Issues:
An Interactive Panel
Jan. 26
PHOENIX - An interactive panel
discussion of issues affected the
Transgender community will take
place at the Community Church of
Hope, 4121 N. 7th Avenue, Phoenix.
On the panel will be: Madelaine
Adelman, PhD, associate professor
whose research focuses on the politics
of gender, sexuality and culture, Myles
Anthony, activist, member of GLSEN
National Jump Start Leadership Team,
Loren Cannon, MS, MA, doctoral
candidate in the Department of
Philosophy, ASU, Transman, Jessica
Pettit, MeD, national trainer, consultant and facilitator for gender inclusivity
and ally development, and Donna
Rose, a post-operative transsexual
woman, who lived the first 40 years of
her life as a successful man in a man’s
world. Today Rose is a well known
educator, author, advocate and spokesperson for a condition steeped in
misconception, prejudice and ignorance.
This event is co-sponsored by
GLSEN Phoenix and 1N10, Inc.
PAGE FIVE
PAGE SIX
JANUARY 18, 2006
WEEKLY OBSERVER
POLITICS 2006
Ahead of Style
A Hair and Nail Salon
Ajia Simone
Owner
426 East 9th Street
Tucson, Arizona
520.624.8400
by Mark R. Kerr
Principled Hypocrisy
Arizona’s Senator John
McCain, the media darling, has been
taking his “straight talk express”
across the country, speaking on
various subjects, such as: supporting
Dubya on Iraq, the economy and his
torture bill (which Dubya signed into
but in a “signing statement,” said his
administration won’t follow and will
ignore), and expressing his concern
about domestic spying and wiretapping American citizens, but still is in
Dubya’s corner like a lapdog in an
effort to get the 2008 GOP Presidential nomination. Too bad McCain
doesn’t practice what he preaches on
his “straight talk” crusade.
McCain has been an advocate of strict privacy laws to restrict
commercial Web sites’ data collection practices, and in a statement
posted on his own Web site, he
assures visitors that “I do not use
‘cookies’ or other means on my Web
site to track your visit in any way,” but
visiting mccain.senate.gov implants a
cookie on the visitor’s PC that will not
expire until 2035, CNET.com reported in an investigative story on
Jan. 6. Cookies are unique ID
numbers that a remote Web site
hands a browser, which automatically
regurgitates them upon subsequent
visits. They can be used for something as permitting someone to
customize a Web site’s default
language for return visits to the worst
case, invading someone’s privacy by
correlating one person’s visits to
potentially thousands of different
Web sites. “ColdFusion was used to
design the site by a third-party
vendor, and we were not aware of any
cookies,” McCain’s office said in a
statement sent to CNET.com, “The
information collected is not used by
our office for any purpose, and we are
currently in the process of deleting
them.”
Sixty-six Members of the
U.S. Congress (Senate and House)
use cookies to track visits to their
government Web sites according to
the CNET investigation. Only two of
Arizona’s Congressional Delegation
use cookies, McCain and Arizona’s
other Senator, Republican Jon Kyl,
whose cookies don’t expire for thirty
years.
McCain has spent years
warning that cookies were a problem
when used by corporations. “Through
the use of cookies and other
technologies, network advertisers
have the ability to collect and store a
great deal of information about
individual consumers,” McCain said
Oct. 3, 2000 during a hearing of the
Senate Commerce Committee on the
matter. “This information is collected
without the consumer’s knowledge or
consent.” It’s ironic for senators to
complain about private companies
setting cookies and then go ahead
and do it themselves, said Jim
Harper, director of information studies at the Cato Institute, a conservative, Washington D.C. based think tank in the CNET story. Ironic maybe,
hypocritical perhaps or just the
Republican way! . . .
In the ongoing saga of the
Abramoff-GOP Scandal on Capitol
Hill, recently, Arizona Congressman
John Shadegg declared his candidacy
to be the next Tom DeLay, er House
Majority Leader as a principled conservative. “I think we need to clean up our
act in the wake of the recent ethics
scandals and get back to the agenda
that brought us the majority in the first
place,” Shadegg said in a statement,
Jan. 11.
Is Shadegg clean of Abramoff?
Not quite, the principled conservative is
ensnared as well by Jack Abramoff, to
the tune of $7,000 in donations, use of
sports suites provided to him for fundraisers at hockey and basketball games
at the MCI Center in Washington, D.C.,
and expenditures for one fund-raising
dinner. According to reports, one of the
contributions went undisclosed for five
years in violation of federal campaignfinance rules. Shadegg has said he will
return the money. Whoops!
Shadegg is such a principled
conservative, he came out against
Dubya’s Medicare Drug Bill Proposed
Debacle, but in Nov. 2003, when it
looked like the drug bill would have died
in the U.S. House, Shadegg voted in
favor and rounded up votes to get it to
pass by two, voting rules broken
notwithstanding. In June 2003, a few
months before the prescription drug
vote, Shadegg said, “Sadly, Congress
is putting politics ahead of policy. In its
rush to pass something—anything—it is
on the verge of imposing a staggering
financial burden on our children and
grandchildren, pushing Medicare closer
to financial collapse and losing a once
in a lifetime opportunity for reform.” . . .
When the corporate hack media calls, Arizona Congressman J.D.
Hayworth, R-Foghorn Leg Horn answers, especially for Faux News.
Hayworth, currently on a book tour
touting his destruction of trees, entitled
“Whatever It Takes,” said he had only
taken a couple of thousand Abramoffian
dollars in contributions and perks.
According to the report from the Center
for
Responsible
Politics,
opensecrets.org, Hayworth had taken
over $60,000 and his PAC, named
“T.E.A.M. PAC,” received more than
$80,000. So what does his constituents
think of all this? According to a new
KPNX-TV/SurveyUSA poll, 62% of CD5 (Hayworth’s District) residents do not
believe Hayworth is “telling the truth”
about contributions he received from
Jack Abramoff, and only 26% say they
believe Hayworth. . . .
Arizona’s Republican-controlled state Legislature has been in
session for one week. State Senate
President Ken Bennett, R-District 1 and
state House Speaker, Jim Weiers, RDistrict 10 have declared that this
election-year session will be less than
100 days, as promised in years past for
which no one believes it. As of press
time, a total of 926 bills have been
introduced in both Chambers for
consideration. More next week on the
credible, ridiculous and sublime, as well
as the measures to look out for since its
2006, an election year and the GOP will
resort to its usual tactic of LGBT
bashing to gain the political capital, as
their leader, Dubya always talks about.
WEEKLY OBSERVER
JANUARY 18, 2006
SLETTERSLETTERSLETTERS
ETTERSLETTERSLETTERSLET
Editor -
This letter is addressed to the
men of Tucson.
Thank You, Thank You,
Thank You.
As of 1-17-06 I am retiring
after 45 years in the bar business.
David and Tom have done a
great job of managing the last few
years. I know they will be great
owners.
The philosophy of the bar will
remain the same: Tucson’s Only
Mens Bar - Venture-N. Those of you
who are 86’d will not change.
Love to all
Jim Dondson
EDITOR:
Last November, approximately
20 people attended the Arizona Human
Rights Fund (AHRF) Tucson town hall
meeting at Wingspan to discuss AHRF,
its structure – including the AHRF
Southern Arizona Caucus – and
AHRF’s accomplishments and goals.
The central issue of the meeting was
the 2005 Tucson City Council endorsements which disappointed, angered
and alienated some LGBT and straight
voters, activists and AHRF members.
The consensus of the meeting
was that the Southern Arizona Caucus
should have greater latitude and
autonomy on candidate endorsements
and voter education, especially in local
races where there are multiple candidates with outstanding pro-LGBT
records. AHRF recognizes that it must
respect the needs and unique characteristics of different communities, and
has agreed to pursue an endorsement
policy that is responsive to regional
needs while maintaining consistency
as a statewide organization. The
meeting also resulted in an agreement
to consistently post notices of Southern
Arizona Caucus meetings on AHRF’s
website and in the weekly emails.
AHRF appreciates the constructive criticism of its members and
friends about AHRF’s recent Tucson
endorsements and of the organization
overall. AHRF staff and leadership is
dedicated to opening lines of communication, listening to the thoughts and
concerns of Tucson residents, and
working toward building stronger
relationships. AHRF staff and leadership also acknowledges the seriousness of the discontent within the
community caused by the Tucson City
Council endorsements, and offers a
sincere apology to those who felt
slighted or hurt.
We look forward to implementing a more inclusive and engaging process, not only regarding
endorsements, but regarding AHRF’s
community activities as well. AHRF
members and friends are encouraged
to attend the monthly Southern
Arizona Caucus meetings. Meeting
times and locations are available on
the “Meetings & Events” page at
www.ahrf.org.
Barbara McCullough-Jones
AHRF Executive Director
Phoenix, Arizona
GLAAD Eye On
The
Media
Today show reviewer regrets
Brokeback comment - In his Jan. 5
Today show review of “Brokeback
Mountain,” NBC’s Gene Shalit referred to the character of Jack as a
“sexual predator” who “tracks Ennis
down and coaxes him into sporadic
trysts.” Based on an outpouring of
passionate emails and phone calls by
Today show viewers angered and hurt
by Mr. Shalit’s assertion, GLAAD
asked for an apology from NBC and
Mr. Shalit for a comment that was
heard by many as defamatory.
On Jan. 10, Mr. Shalit responded to GLAAD’s request with a
statement saying, “I certainly had no
intention of casting aspersions on
anyone in the Gay community or on
the community itself. I regret any
emotional hurt that may have resulted
from my review of ‘Brokeback Mountain.’” GLAAD thanks and applauds
Mr. Shalit for clarifying his comments
and making clear that he did not intend
his words to be defamatory to the
LGBT community.
Below is the full text of Mr.
Shalit’s statement:
In reviewing the fictional
movie “Brokeback Mountain,” I expressed my opinion of “Jack”, one of
the fictional characters. It is my
responsibility to my audience to
present my views of the film and the
actions of the film’s fictional characters. My view of “Jack” may be
contrary to the views of others, but we
are all entitled to our opinions. In
describing the behavior of “Jack” I
used words (“sexual predator”) that I
now discover have angered, agitated,
and hurt many people. I did not intend
to use a word that many in the Gay
community consider incendiary. Baron
Lytton wrote in 1839 that “the pen is
mightier than the sword,” and this
matter proves again how hurtful words
can be. I very much regret using them.
Continued on Page Eighteen
PAGE SEVEN
PAGE EIGHT
JANUARY 18, 2006
WEEKLY OBSERVER
Author JT LeRoy Called Hoax
NEW YORK - The fragile HIVpositive ex-teen hustler known to the
literary world as JT LeRoy is actually a
40-year-old woman, the New York
Times reports, reported the PlanetOut
Network.
The elusive, genderbending literary artist known as JT
LeRoy was revealed Monday (Jan. 9)
as an elaborate hoax that duped many
readers, celebrities and editors, as
reported by the New York Times.
Rather than being a 25-yearold, HIV-positive former male teen
hustler, the author is allegedly a 40year-old woman named Laura Albert.
The person who appeared in public as
LeRoy — usually disguised with a blond
wig and dark sunglasses — is Albert’s
sister-in-law Savannah Knoop, the
Times reported. LeRoy became a
literary sensation in 2000, when his
first novel, “Sarah,” was published.
The story was reportedly based on
LeRoy’s own life story, which involved
being pimped by his mother into
prostitution at the age of 12. He was
supposedly rescued from the streets
by Albert and her husband, Geoffrey
Knoop, and they became a family in
San Francisco.
His dramatic life story attracted celebrities and high-profile
literary figures, including Gus Van
Sant, Courtney Love and author Dave
Eggers, to support and encourage his
burgeoning career. He later published
a collection of short stories, “The Heart
Is Deceitful Above All Things,” and a
long short story called “Harold’s End.”
JT LeRoy rarely appeared in public,
but when he did he was heavily
disguised to look androgynous, and
his voice was reportedly feminine. At
some time during his rise to fame, he
began saying that he was actually a
Transgender woman.
The elusiveness and several
oddities, such as the advance for
“Sarah” being paid to Laura Albert’s
sister, led many to question JT
LeRoy’s identity. Stephen Beachy
wrote an article casting doubt about
the writer’s persona in the October
issue of New York magazine. “There is
no longer any doubt that ‘JT LeRoy’ is a
fake identity created by Laura Albert
and her husband, Geoffrey Knoop,
maintained with the help of Geoffrey’s
sister, Savannah,” Beachy said in an
e-mail to the San Francisco Chronicle
on Monday. Albert and Knoop did not
respond to requests for comment from
JT LeRoy
the Chronicle or the Times.
Jenny Stewart, the entertainment editor for PlanetOut Inc., said she
was not surprised to hear about the
hoax, as she tried to work with the
author on a few occasions that became
frustrating because of LeRoy’s unusual
demands and whims. Stewart, who in
August 2005 decided not to publish a
celebrity interview LeRoy conducted,
said the author’s payment was held up
because he refused to give a Social
Security number. “We always require a
Social Security number from our
writers, but what we got was to send
payment to some company in Nevada,”
she said. “Without that number, we
cannot pay, and we’ve made that clear
to JT Leroy’s ‘people.’ “
Christopher Daly, director of
the Transgender Law Center, told the
PlanetOut Network he found some
elements of the hoax troubling. “It’s
obviously not the crime of the century,”
he said, “but for a community like the
Transgender community, whose voice
is so rarely heard, it stings to hear about
somebody fraudulently appropriating
the experiences of Transgender people
in this way.”
Ron Turner of Last Gasp,
LeRoy’s publisher in San Francisco,
told the Chronicle the revelation will not
change his plan to publish LeRoy’s next
novel, “Labour,” this spring. “If it was a
hoax, hey, it was a great hoax,” he said.
“They’re still great books. I don’t care
who wrote them as long as they’re really
good reads.”
WEEKLY OBSERVER
‘Brokeback Mountain’ Earns
Four Golden Globes;
LGBT Characters Win Nods
Brokeback Mountain Wins Four Golden Globe Awards
“Brokeback Mountain’s” depiction
LOS ANGELES - ‘Brokeback
of sexual attraction between two men that
Mountain,’ the critically acclaimed film
spans decades, despite their respective
about two cowboys who fall in love,
marriages, has sparked little controversy
dominated the Golden Globe awards
from right-wing groups, which have
ceremony Monday (Jan. 16), winning
recently attacked companies like Ford and
four honors, including best picture and
Microsoft for their pro-Gay policies.
best director.
When “Brokeback Mountain”
In addition to honoring director
opened in December, it earned the highest
Ang Lee, the awards for “Brokeback”
per-screen gross of any film in 2005.
included best screenplay for Larry
McMurtry and Diana Ossana and best
The nominations for Academy
song, “A Love that Will Never Grow
Awards will be announced on Jan. 31, and
Old.” “Brokeback” was also nominated
the awards ceremony will take place
for best actor (Heath Ledger), supportMarch 5 in Hollywood.
ing actress (Michelle Williams) and
score (Gustavo Santaolalla).
Two other groundbreaking cinematic portrayals of LGBT characters
won acting awards for Phillip Seymour
Hoffman, who played conflicted Gay
writer Truman Capote in “Capote,” and
Felicity Huffman, who played a
Transgender woman who reconnects
with her son.
Phillip Seymour Hoffman
as Truman Capote
The Gay and Lesbian Alliance
Against Defamation (GLAAD) was
quick to applaud the winners on
Monday night.
“This is yet another victory in
‘Brokeback Mountain’’s growing list of
accomplishments. The Hollywood Foreign Press Association, like most
critics, recognized the emotional authenticity of this film and its power to
connect with both Gay and straight
audiences alike,” said GLAAD President Neil G. Giuliano. “The critical and
award-winning success of movies like
‘Brokeback Mountain,’ ‘Capote’ and
‘Transamerica’ should send a very
clear message to Hollywood that there
is a market for these kinds of smart,
inclusive films.”
Black LGBT Search For Acceptance In Shadow of
Martin Luther King Day
WASHINGTON, D.C. - As the
country observed the birthday of
Dr. Martin Luther King, Black Gays
continue to search for acceptance
within the African American community, 365Gay.com reported.
Despite support from the NAACP
which has condemned constitutional amendments to ban samesex marriage, Black churches have
fueled anti-Gay sentiment. Last
November many Blacks across the
country supported President Bush’s
re-election over concerns Democrats were too favorable to LGBT
issues.
Black church leaders were
instrumental in the advancement of
amendments in several states to
ban same-sex marriage.
The
growing disharmony between Black
clergy and Gays reached a climax
in October when Gay African
American leader Keith Boykin was
prevented from speaking at the
Millions More March on the
National Mall, despite an invitation
from march organizer Louis
Farrakhan.
The position of Black
churches, say Gay African American leaders, would have been
condemned by Dr. King. Dr. King’s
widow, Coretta Scott King, has
said on a number of occasions that
her husband would have supported
Gay marriage. But, her statements
Felicity Huffman as a
transgendered woman in the
film ‘Transamerica’
have estranged her from her daughter,
Bernice King, an outspoken opponent
of Gay unions.
The civil rights leader’s 1963
March on Washington, one of the
largest nonviolent protests ever held in
the United States, was organized by a
close associate of Dr. King - Bayard
Rustin, an openly Gay man.
Rustin brought Gandhi’s protest techniques to the American civil
rights movement, and helped mold
Martin Luther King, Jr. into an
international symbol of peace and
nonviolence.
But, despite these
achievements, Rustin was silenced,
threatened, arrested, beaten, imprisoned and fired from important leadership positions, largely because he was
an openly Gay man in a fiercely
homophobic era. Little has changed
for Gay African Americans since then.
African American Gays and
Black clergy who are Gay positive will
hold a landmark summit in Atlanta to
confront growing homophobia. The
keynote address will be delivered by
former Presidential candidate the Rev.
Al Sharpton. The summit, organized
by the National Black Justice Coalition, the only national Black LGBT
organization in the country, is aimed at
developing specific strategies to
challenge homophobia in religious
institutions - from the seminary to the
pulpit.
Right-Wingers
Take Aim At Ford Again
DETROIT - A coalition of
socially conservative groups has
accused Ford Motor Co. of taking a
pro-Gay side in “the culture war”
and called on the auto giant to
reverse its recent decision to
continue running ads in LGBT
publications,
reported
the
PlanetOut Network. In a letter to
Chairman Bill Ford on Tuesday,
Jan. 10the group claimed that Ford
reneged on a verbal deal struck
Nov. 28 with the American Family
Association in which the company
agreed not to donate to LGBT
groups and Pride events or
advertise its brands (except Volvo)
in LGBT media outlets.
The awards, presented by the
Hollywood Foreign Press to honor
excellence in film and television, are
widely considered to signal favorites
for the Academy Awards.
Several LGBT performers and
artists were also nominated for Golden
Globes, including actor Nathan Lane
(“The Producers”), actress Cynthia
Nixon (TV miniseries “Warm Springs”)
and writer Tony Kushner (screenplay
co-writer for “Munich”).
PAGE NINE
JANUARY 18, 2006
“We can not, and will not,
sit by as Ford supports a social
agenda aimed at the destruction of
the family,” the group warned. The
letter, written by AFA Chairman
Donald Wildmon, was signed by
more than 35 other groups,
including Focus on the Family, the
Family Research Council and
Concerned Women for America.
The groups criticized the company
for meeting with LGBT leaders last
month, saying, “Evidently you
consider seven homosexual leaders more important than your
thousands of dealers.”
The December meeting
led to Ford publicly restating its
commitment to diversity and pledging to advertise its brands in media
outlets — including LGBT publications — as appropriate. Ford
representatives also said there
was no deal with the AFA about
canceling LGBT ad campaigns.
“We strongly suggest that Ford
remove itself from involvement in the
culture war and apply its resources to
building the best product possible,” the
groups said. They requested a
response in writing by Jan. 20.
“Ford’s last statement is
crystal clear,” Jay Smith Brown,
spokesman for the Human Rights
Campaign, said in response to the
groups’ letter. “It’s time for these
extremist groups to move on already.”
Justin Nelson, co-founder and
president of the National Gay and
Lesbian Chamber of Commerce,
called the letter “beyond ridiculous.” “I
sit here in amazement that these
people do not understand that unlike
them, bigotry and hatred is not a
mantra a major corporation wants to
promote,” he told the PlanetOut
Network. “It’s Economics 101: Companies target and market to diverse
segments in which they do business in
an effort to increase market share and
make a positive impact on the bottom
line. If a company was to employ the
AFA strategy, it would not only be
morally bankrupt, but would be in
Chapter 11 as a business enterprise.”
PAGE TEN
JANUARY 18, 2006
WEEKLY OBSERVER
PHOTOS: Bill Morrow
2006 Roadrunner
Regional Rodeo
WEEKLY OBSERVER
JANUARY 18, 2006
enroll in that study or several others
testing the new approaches. “The
question is, how good are they?” says
the NCI’s Norman Coleman. “You’re
not treating the whole breast. What’s
the loss (in effectiveness) by leaving
some of the breast untreated?”
Pastor Resigns After Arrest
For Lewdness
TULSA - A pastor has resigned
from his Tulsa church and from the
executive committee of the Southern
Baptist Convention after being arrested on charges that he propositioned a male plainclothes police
officer, reported the Associated Press
on Advocate.com.
Rev. Lonnie Latham was
senior pastor at South Tulsa Baptist
Church, also resigned from the board
of directors of Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma on Thursday
(Jan. 12), citing “personal reasons,”
Heidi Wilburn, a spokeswoman for the
state organization said Friday (Jan.
13).
He was arrested Tuesday
Rev. Lonnie Laltham as a
pastor on the left and his mug shot
as a prisoner on the right
night (Jan. 10) on charges of offering
to engage in an act of lewdness. He
was accused of asking the officer to
join him in his hotel room for oral sex,
said police Capt. Jeffrey Becker.
Doctors Test New Radiation
Treatment For Breast Cancer
NEW YORK - Radiation may get
a little easier for thousands of breast
cancer patients: Doctors now can
target cancer-killing beams just at the
tumor site instead of the whole breast,
cutting the usual six-week treatment
down to five days, reported the
Associated Press on Advocate.com. A
major study is under way to prove
whether the easier therapy is as
effective as the old-fashioned kind and
if so, who’s a good candidate and
which of three five-day methods works
best. Even before those results are in,
Canadian scientists are working to
speed treatment even more. They’ve
developed a one-day method, in which
radiation seeds are permanently im-
planted inside the breast to kill
stray cancer cells while women go
about their normal routines. This is
similar to an approach for treating
prostate cancer in men today.
It’s an exciting time for this
new approach, called partialbreast radiation, which was already quickly gaining in popularity
even before the National Cancer
Institute–funded study to prove
how well it works began recruiting
volunteers in March. But specialists warn that women must
carefully weigh the new options
and that the best course for those
who want the shorter therapy is to
Early-stage studies suggest
the five-day approaches can work well
for at least some patients, but too few
women have been tracked for long
enough to be sure that partial-breast
radiation works as well as standard
therapy in preventing cancer’s return.
“Patients need to understand where
we’re at,” cautions Frank Vicini of
William Beaumont Hospital in Royal
Oak, Mich., who pioneered the fiveday approach and is leading the new
NCI study.
About 70% of the 200,000
American women who will be diagnosed with breast cancer this year
qualify for a lumpectomy removing
just the tumor, not the whole breast. A
lumpectomy plus radiation cures early
stage breast cancer just as well as
breast-removing mastectomies do.
But daily radiation treatment for about
six weeks is an inconvenience at best,
and at worst impossible for women
who live far from medical centers or
who can’t spare that much time away
from jobs or home responsibilities.
Also, some women suffer serious skin
side effects from the beams. Consequently, many early-stage patients
choose a mastectomy. Worse, up to
one quarter of lumpectomy patients
forego radiation altogether, risking a
recurrence. Partial-breast radiation
attempts to focus the powerful treatment on just the areas most likely to
harbor stray cancer cells, those near
the original tumor; most methods do
so from inside the breast.
In the NCI study, 3,000
patients around the country are being
randomly assigned to either standard
PAGE ELEVEN
six-week radiation or one of the three
five-day
methods:
Interstitial
brachytherapy, in which thin tubes are
inserted through the breast and pellets
of radioactive iodine are temporarily
placed in the tubes twice a day; Balloon
brachytherapy, administered with a
machine called the MammoSite that
inserts radioactive pellets into a balloon
filling the tumor area; External radiation
focused just on the tumor site.
In Toronto, Jean-Philippe Pignol
is trying to make partial-breast radiation
even faster—a one-day method similar
to a treatment men with prostate cancer
can choose. Pignol has permanently
implanted pellets made of a different
radioactive material, palladium, into 44
women’s breasts. The pellets emit
radiation for about two months until they
run out; they then sit harmlessly just
under the skin. For this treatment to
work, Pignol and colleagues at Toronto’s
Sunnybrook and Women’s Health
Sciences Centre had to create an
ultrasound-guided tube to implant the
pellets at just the right spot, and talk the
pellets’ manufacturer into connecting
the 60 pellets with strands, almost like a
necklace, so they don’t shift.
In a study published this month
by the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology, Pignol’s
first 16 patients tolerated the treatment
well. He’s tracking how the women fare
over time. Finally, the Food and Drug
Administration approved a new machine, Xoft’s Axxent Electronic
Brachytherapy System, to deliver partial-breast radiation through a miniature
X-ray system, potentially easier for
doctors to handle. All of these methods
must be rigorously tested to prove
whether they’re equally effective, cautions Vicini. But probably, he says,
“what you’re going to end up finding out
is there’s no one particular technique
that works in all patients. Ultimately,
we’ll need more than one technique.”
PAGE TWELVE
Little Chance Alito’s
Confirmation Will Be Blocked
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Senate
confirmation hearings ended Friday on
Judge Samuel Alito’s nomination to the
Supreme Court and while Democrats
continue to oppose him it is doubtful they
will be able to muster enough support for
a filibuster to block a vote.
a law student. Kennedy read from a
publication put out by the group that
attacked Gays, people with AIDS,
women and other minorities.
Despite 700 questions being put
to Alito on a range of topics his answers
danced around the more contentious,
including LGBT rights and abortion.
In one selection from The
Prospect, read by Kennedy into the
record, the publication, noting that
scientists believed they had traced
the origin of AIDS to rhesus
monkeys, called for more research
and that it be conducted on homosexuals. It further suggested that the
studies be conducted on members of
Princeton’s Gay alliance. Kennedy
then read a portion from another
Prospect article attacking adoption
for Gays. “I would not have anything
to do with statements of that nature,”
Alito told Kennedy. “Had I thought
that that’s what this organization
stood for, I would never have been
associated with it in any way.”
Senator Russell Feingold (D-WI)
questioned Alito on his 2001 vote on the
3rd US Circuit Court of Appeals to strike
down a public school policy that
prohibited offensive conduct toward
individuals based on sexual orientation or
other personal characteristics. In the
case, Alito ruled that the First Amendment only protects people against
harassment regarding religious beliefs.
Feingold asked Alito whether he felt the
First Amendment might also protect Gay
students against harassment. Alito said
only that the policy he struck down read
the amendment too broadly.
Sen. Sam Brownback (RKA), a leading supporter of a
constitutional amendment to ban
same-sex marriage, asked Alito
about Gay unions. Brownback wanted
to know if Alito believed that the
Federal Defense of Marriage Act
which says states do not have to
accept same-sex marriages from
other states is is counter to the fullfaith-and-credit clause of the Constitution. Without directly answering
the question Alito said that the issue
is the subject of disagreement by
constitutional scholars.
“It not only prohibited the expression of political viewpoints, but it went so
far as to say that just about anything that
any student would say about another
student that would be offensive to that
student, including comments on the way
the student dressed or the things that they
liked to do, would be a violation of the
anti-harassment policy,” Alito said. But
he also noted that in another case he had
ruled in favor of a New Jersey student
who wanted attend a high school outside
of his neighborhood because he had
been subjected to homophobic harassment.
Alito’s nomination is opposed by Lambda Legal, the National
Gay and Lesbian Task Force, Human
Rights Campaign, National Center
for Lesbian Rights, and Parents,
Families and Friends of Lesbians
and Gays among others.
“I don’t think he’s going to get
many votes from Democrats on the
committee,” Sen. Charles Schumer (DNY) told CBS’ “The Early Show.” “As for
a filibuster, it’s something we’ll have to
discuss. So it’s not on the table or off the
table right now,” Schumer, a member of
the Justice Committee said. At least two
moderate Republicans have said they
would not support a filibuster on Alito.
After four days of hearings, there
are “even more questions about Judge
Alito’s commitment to the fairness and
equality for all,” said Sen. Edward
Kennedy (D-MA). On Wednesday (Jan.
11) Kennedy questioned Alito about his
membership in the now defunct Concerned Alumni of Princeton, an extreme
conservative group that Alito joined while
WEEKLY OBSERVER
JANUARY 18, 2006
GOP Funds Drive
For G/L Marriage Ban
TALLAHASSEE - Nearly all of
Florida4marriage.org’s campaign funds
have come from the state Republican
Party, reports the St. Petersburg
Times on the PlanetOut Network. The
group trying to put a same-sex
marriage ban on the Florida ballot in
2006 is being bankrolled by the state
Republican Party, according to an
investigative report by Florida’s St.
Petersburg Times.
State campaign finance
records unearthed by the newspaper
show that $193,000 has been raised by
Florida4marriage.org — $150,000 of it
from a single donation from the Florida
Republican Party. The paper described the contribution as surprising,
since Republican Gov. Jeb Bush has
called such an amendment unnecessary because state law already bars
same-sex marriage. “Gov. Bush was
not aware of the contribution,” Alia
Faraj, a Bush spokeswoman, told the
paper. “The party has a right to
participate in the process and support
initiatives that reflect their principles.”
Florida GOP chief Andy
Palmer told the paper that similar
measures boosted Republican turnout
in battleground states in 2004 by
energizing turnout among religious
conservatives.
“We see it as a desperate
attempt by a gubernatorial candidate
who is behind in the polls and has
missed every mark it has set for itself,”
said Brian Winfield, communications
director for Equality Florida.
Gubernatorial candidate Tom
Gallagher, the state’s chief financial
officer, helped organize media events
last Friday (Jan. 13) in an attempt to
create momentum for the ballot
language, Winfield told the PlanetOut
Network. Florida4Marriage chairman
John Stemberger said his organization
has collected at least 250,000 signatures. The group needs 600,000
signatures by Feb. 1 to qualify for the
ballot.
Eric Stern, the executive
director of the National Stonewall
Democrats, an organization devoted to
LGBT issues, said these developments show that the Republican Party
is desperate. “The corruption of the
Republican Party is failing to convince
voters to support their candidates, so
they are turning to controversial
activist groups to push unnecessary
initiatives in an attempt to scare
individuals in the electoral fringe into
voting,” Stern said.
Patrick Howell, president of
the Log Cabin Republicans Orlando
chapter, said he was surprised by the
news, since he believed the Gov. Jeb
Bush was against the measure. “I think
it is a terrible use of party funds,” he
told the PlanetOut Network. “Party
funds are meant to support Republican
candidates and expand and strengthen
the Republican party. I think that giving
money to the anti-marriage initiative
does not meet any of those stated
goals.”
“Voters should be weary of
these stealth tactics used by the
Republican Party both nationally and
here in Florida,” said Michael Albetta,
president of the Florida GLBT Democratic Caucus, an official caucus of the
Florida Democratic Party representing
more than 10 chapters across the
state. “Republicans fear a Democratic
trend in this state, and they are
attempting to force measures like
these as a substitute for productive
policies.”
WEEKLY OBSERVER
JANUARY 18, 2006
NOTES FROM THE FOR-REAL SIDE
Made In Tucson
For the past 30 years or so, every
time I’ve asked Tucson drama people why
you can’t produce original dramatic works
in our fair pueblo I’ve been told that (1) the
money for them can’t be raised and/or (2)
there’s no local audience for original
drama here and/or (3) the local press
wouldn’t respond to local drama and it
would therefore die on the vine.
I now know a Tucsonan who has
disposed of the first two objections and is
working on getting rid of the third. He
recently produced a two-hour DVD, found
enough of an audience to make a profit
showing it, and has heard some vague
mutterings that it might get reviewed
locally.
Hurrah! It’s now possible to
become a movie star without leaving
Tucson. How did it all happen? Before I
answer that question I want to emphasize
the artistic seriousness of my informant’s
enterprise. We are not talking about home
movies here. The forty-minute sample of
this filmmaker’s work that I saw compared
favorably with standard commercial fare.
It wasn’t brilliant. It wasn’t amateurish. It
had the look of everyday dramatic
commercial TV with perhaps a hint of a
British influence.
As for how he did it, he actually
took a harder route than was necessary.
He didn’t know about Access Tucson,
wasn’t aware that they’d let him use the
equipment he needed for free as well as
instruct him in its uses, so he saved his
nickels and dimes until he could rent what
he required. Access Tucson, which was
formerly known as Tucson Community
Cable, is an agency funded by fees the
cable companies pay the City. Its mission
is to give ordinary citizens a way to
produce programs and show them on TV.
My informant was his own writer,
producer, director and editor, so he saved
a lot of money right there. Most of the
acting was done by friends who did it for
free. The real actors agreed to work for
copies of the finished DVD that they
wanted to send out with their resumes.
The next step was getting the
product in front of a paying audience. The
Loft, a theater located on Speedway just
east of Country Club, lets filmmakers
screen their works for $500 a pop. My
informant said that, with almost no
publicity, his screening at The Loft
attracted a large enough audience for him
to pay the $500 and make a profit of
$1,000. If a largely unadvertised production by an unknown filmmaker can draw
enough of an audience to make a profit, no
one can really say that there’s no audience
for original drama in Tucson. That myth
must be put to rest.
Our intrepid filmmaker is still
trying to crack the final nut, that of getting a
critical response. He doesn’t have a firm
commitment from anyone to publish a
review, but he says some local press
people have expressed interest. Getting
reviewed is an important part of the
creative process. Even purely commercial
ventures that achieve enormous commercial success get reviewed and even those
artists who boast of hating criticism do in
fact take it seriously, especially when it’s
favorable.
I suspect that it’s going to be
difficult to get the Tucson press to review a
Tucson film product. It goes back to the
issue of our historical inferiority complex.
It might be expressed something like this:
“If I seem to be taking a Tucson product
seriously, Tucsonans will laugh at me.”
And of course they would. My informant
told me that there are about a dozen
people in Tucson who are doing what he is
— making original productions and showing them at The Loft. If there’s enough of
by Lee Thorn
an audience to support these filmmakers with negligible publicity and
no critical media response, the logical
and extremely interesting question is,
“What would happen if the local
media woke up and got behind this?”
If just one of the daily
newspapers or one of the local TV
stations decided to give these Tucson
producers the serious critical attention they deserve, maybe we could
grow an economically and artistically
significant local industry. I’m thinking
of something that would develop
slowly over a long period of time, but
wouldn’t it be fun to watch? And
wouldn’t it be a kick to be a part of it,
even if just as a member of the
audience for it that wasn’t supposed
to exist?
[Thorn welcomes comments,
suggestions for future columns, and
tips on local skulduggery that ought to
be exposed. Write to Box 85571,
Tucson, AZ 85754.
E-mail:
[email protected]]
NGLTF Gets
$3-Million Grant
Continued from Page One
made to the task force in our 33-year
history, it is the largest known gift ever
given directly to support movement
building and advocacy in the 50-plusyear history of the modern LGBT
rights movement.”
The grant consists of a $1
million donation from Stryker and $2
million from the Arcus Foundation.
The task force said it will use the
money to train leaders, organize local
communities, strengthen coalitions
among LGBT and non-Gay allies and
build up statewide LGBT organizations.
The group noted that the
award comes at a “crucial time” for the
LGBT community, as anti-Gay laws
and constitutional amendments
against same-sex couple rights are
likely to appear on several state
ballots in 2006.
The Arcus Foundation, with
offices in Michigan and New York
City, invests in causes relating to
human rights, civil rights and animal
rights, according to Stryker, who has
been listed in the Forbes 400 tally of
wealthiest Americans.
GET YOUR PHOTOS TAKEN BY AMANDA
FINEST QUALITYF
FAIREST PRICES
(520) 358-9810
BY APPOINTMENT
PAGE THIRTEEN
PAGE FOURTEEN
JANUARY 18, 2006
WEEKLY OBSERVER
TUCSON RESOURCES - TUCSON RESOURCES - TUCSON RESOURCES
520 615-6436
P.O. Box 13312
Tucson, AZ 85732
[email protected]
www.tucsonglbtchamber.org
JANUARY 18, 2006
WEEKLY OBSERVER
HOROSCOPES
© 2006 Madam Lichtenstein
What happens when the brilliant Sun opposes stern Saturn? Our
frothy dreams get a pop of reality.
Rude awakening? Maybe just a gentle
nudge? It is all good, if we remember to
pack a parachute for our landing.
ARIES (MAR. 21 - APR. 20)
Compadres are ready to have a
good Gay time but proud Rams may
wind up paying their freight. Your life is
filled with assorted mischief, boundless creativity and glorious romance all
with a price tag. Choose your assorted
jollies with an eye towards personal
enjoyment as opposed to what the
group’s wants. Press the flesh but
count your fingers as Sun opposes
Saturn.
TAURUS (APR. 21 - MAY 21)
You are the wunderkind of work
and can do no wrong. That is until you
trot home after yet another late night at
the office. (It was at the office, wasn’t
it?) Significant others are significantly
pissed. In fact, any type of relationship
can create moments of intense conflict
on the domestic front when Sun
opposes Saturn. Who loves you baby?
I know it ain’t the Vice President.
GEMINI (MAY 22 - JUNE 21)
Communication is the connector
to every part of your life this week. Pink
Twins hanker to make a few pithy
statements to get their various opinions even greater global coverage.
You press hound, you! Travel may be
highlighted but you can be strangely
coy about what you need and where
you want to go. Is it because you
secretly yearn to visit Gary, Indiana?
personal cheering section. Shelve the
concept “me” and go for the “we.”
Wheeee!
VIRGO (AUG. 24 - SEPT. 23)
Queer Virgins are usually very
pragmatic and practical. Now you are
apt to be more intuitive, spiritual and
psychic. At least that is what you think.
In fact these voices in your head can be
a bit disconcerting. It will be easy to fall
back into old, safe patterns rather than
take a risk on totally new and exciting
opportunities. Spread your wings and
make a creamy, cheesy schmear.
LIBRA (SEPT. 24 - OCT. 23)
You are the life of the party. At
least you will think so as the Sun
opposes Saturn. Proud Libras cannot
be tied down or reined in and avidly
seek over-the-top wildly extreme fun.
Yet, friends are decidedly unimpressed with your antics so you may
have to blaze a new independent trail
and seek new playmates. How boisterous can you be? Why not seek the bois
and ask?
SCORPIO (OCT. 24 - NOV. 22)
Is it January doldrums? Is it the
post holiday lull? Whatever it is you
seem content to hang around the
house and keep a low profile now.
Proud Scorps realize that they need to
find the balance between an intensely
active career and a happy, calm
homelife. Currently, concentrating on
one negates the other. Until the
solution presents itself, repair and rest
your nubby stub.
SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 23 - DEC.
22)
CANCER (JUNE 22 - JULY 23)
Gay Crabs think that they are
especially sexy this week. It may even
seem to be true as many alluring folks
are inexplicably drawn to you. You
draw them in as a moth to a flame but
don’t be surprised if you singe your
own pink claws instead. Sun opposes
Saturn and makes every intimate
encounter a costly one. Gaudy baubles
don’t come cheap as you will soon find
out!
You yearn to make your mark
when Sun opposes Saturn. Will it be a
dirt smudge or a neon sign? It is up to
you Gay Archer. Will you fall back into
old habits of pushing, pushing, pushing until you are all pushed out? Don’t.
The secret to your success is to think
big but take action in small steps. A
couple of umbrellas steps can’t hurt
either as long as Simon Says.
CAPRICORN (DEC. 23 - JAN.
20)
LEO (JULY 24 - AUG. 23)
You have always enjoyed roaming the plains. Now, as Sun opposes
Saturn, proud Lions find themselves
lured, trapped and caged. Relationships become stronger and more
defined. You may rant and rail at your
lack of independence but secretly you
are thrilled. You now have your own
Practical pink Caps think that
they can buy love but this week they
are sadly mistaken. Sure you can woo
a few misbegotten souls with glitter
and gloss for a short time. However, if
you are in it for the long haul, the
expensively short and sweet approach
may not ultimately satisfy. Don’t you
want someone to love you just as you
are? Err lets think about this.
ENHANCE YOUR
WELL-BEING
AQUARIUS (JAN. 21 - FEB. 19)
Who is this superstar?
Aqueerians are the center of attention
and manage to grab the limelight
wherever they go. This is good if you
are a solo act but it may cause frictions
with partners who begin to feel left out.
And not just partners feel that way. You
may also dazzle potential admirers to
the point of overload. Can you be too
much of a good thing now? You don’t
think so.
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PISCES (FEB. 20 - MAR. 20)
Stress may build to a breaking
point. There are too many under-thesurface things going on at work.
Guppies are very sensitive to outside
stimuli and now you are bombarded
with all sorts of cosmic vibes. How can
you discern the real from the imagined? You can’t. Wait. Next week the
demons make themselves known in no
uncertain terms so you can overcome
them.
PAGE FIFTEEN
PAGE SIXTEEN
Wednesday, January 18
Men’s Social Network (open to
men of all ages; newcomers welcomed: 7:00 p.m. Join Jack for an
evening of Canasta. If you don’t know
how to play, they’ll teach you-and it’s a
very relaxed atmosphere.
For
directions and reservations, please
call Jack at 887-3736.
Thursday, January 19
#1 Men’s Social Network (open
to men of all ages; newcomers
welcomed: 7:00 p.m. Join the men of
MSN for Coffee Night out at Rainbow
Planet Coffee House. This is a chance
to have a cup of coffee and chat with
the men of MSN. This is a No-host
event, so please ask Barista to point
you in our direction.
#2 Call Bruce at 743-3890 and
reserve by Noon today for Pizza Night
on the 20th.
Friday, January 20
Men’s Social Network (open to
men of all ages; newcomers welcomed): 7:00
p.m. Join Bruce as he hosts
Pizza Night. For just $5.00, come and
enjoy a night of Pizza and good
conversation. For reservations and
directions, please call Bruce at 7433890. Please reserve your spot by
noon on Thursday, January 19th.
Saturday, January 21
#1 Men’s Social Network (open
JANUARY 18, 2006
Non Bar Calendar
to men of all ages; newcomers welcomed: 8:30 a.m. Join Robert, Mike &
Jack for a morning of Volleyball. This is
played for fun, and you’ll get to know
some nice guys as you play. For details
and directions, please call Jack & Mike at
881-5733 or Robert at 400-1376.
#1. Men’s Social Network (open
to men of all ages; newcomers
welcomed):
7:00 p.m. Join us for the “putting
out the Newsletter” Night. For
reservations and directions,
please call Arlan at 323-7414.
#2 Men’s Social Network (open to
men of all ages; newcomers welcomed:
7:00 p.m. Steve hosts Pinochle Night. If
you don’t know how to play, but would like
to learn, this is the place. For more
information, please call Steve at 6642076.
#2. Men’s Social Network (open
to men of all ages; newcomers
welcomed):
7:30 p.m. Join us for the MSN
Premiere of “Holiday Heart”, a 2002
film starring Ving Rhames as a larger
than life drag queen. (after Newsletter
Night). For reservations and directions, please call Arlan at 323-7414.
Sunday, January 22
#1 Men’s Social Network (open to
men of all ages; newcomers welcomed:
12:00 p.m. Steve & Marv host Classic
Movie & Bagels. They will be showing
“The Day the Earth Stood Still”. For
reservations and directions, call Steve or
Marv at 745-0304.
#2 If you would like to donate your
gently used items to the MSN Auction at
our February 4th Auction/Pot Luck,
please contact Jack at home at 887-3736
or 745-8844 at work. He will store and if
needed, pick up the articles from MSN
members.
Monday, January 23
Tuesday, January 24
# 1 Men’s Social Network (open
to men of all ages; newcomers
welcomed: 7:00 p.m. The Circle of
Men is a support group that helps you
deal with yourself and your relationships with others. For directions and
reservations, please call Tom at 5912828.
#2 Men’s Social Network (open
to men of all ages; newcomers
welcomed):
7:00 p.m. Karol hosts Bridge
Night. If you don’t know how to play,
they’ll teach you-and it’s a very
relaxed atmosphere. For reserva-
WEEKLY OBSERVER
tions and directions, please call Karol
at 744-9017.
Wednesday, January 25
#1 Men’s Social Network (open
to men of all ages; newcomers
welcomed: 7:00
p.m. Join Merlin & Lee for an
evening of Canasta. If you don’t know
how to play, they’ll teach you-and it’s
a very relaxed atmosphere. For
directions and reservations, please
call Lee & Merlin at 207-5336.
#2 If you would like to donate
your gently used items to the MSN
Auction at our February 4th Auction/
Pot Luck, please contact Jack at
home at 887-3736 or 745-8844 at
work. He will store and if needed, pick
up the articles from MSN members.
Thursday, January 26
Men’s Social Network (open to
men of all ages; newcomers welcomed: 7:00 p.m. Join the men of
MSN for Coffee Night out at Rainbow
Planet Coffee House. This is a
chance to have a cup of coffee and
chat with the men of MSN. This is a
No-host event, so please ask Barista
to point you in our direction.
Friday, January 27
#1 Men’s Social Network (open
to men of all ages; newcomers
welcomed:7:00 p.m. Lloyd hosts a fun
evening of Scrabble. If you don’t
know how to play, we’ll be glad to
teach you. For reservations and
directions, please call Lloyd at 7928537.
#2 If you would like to donate
your gently used items to the MSN
Auction at our February 4th Auction/
Pot Luck, please contact Jack at
home at 887-3736 or 745-8844 at
work. He will store and if needed, pick
up the articles from MSN members.
Saturday, January 28
Men’s Social Network (open to
men of all ages; newcomers welcomed:7:00 p.m. Marv hosts Pinochle
Night. If you don’t know how to play,
but would like to learn, this is the
place. For more information, please
call Marv at 745-0304.
Tuesday, January 31
#1 Men’s Social Network (open
to men of all ages; newcomers
welcomed: 7:00 p.m. The Circle of
Men is a support group that helps you
deal with yourself and your relationships with others. For directions and
reservations, please call Tom at 5912828.
#2 If you would like to donate
your gently used objects in support of
MSN, please contact Jack at home at
887-3736 or 745-8844 at work. He will
store and if needed, pick up the
articles from MSN members.
Saturday, February 4
Men’s Social Network (open to
men of all ages; newcomers welcomed): 7:00 p.m. We invite you to
join us for our Annual Auction Pot
Luck dinner and to get to know the
nice guys of MSN. The Auction is our
major fundraiser for the year and has
allowed our dues to remain at a more
than reasonable level since our
inception. While reservations are not
necessary, please call Robert at 4001376 for location and directions. If
you would like to donate your gently
used objects in support of MSN,
please contact Jack at home at 8873736 or 745-8844 at work. He will
store and if needed, pick up the
articles from MSN members.
WEEKLY OBSERVER
PAGE SEVENTEEN
JANUARY 18, 2006
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PAGE EIGHTEEN
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Sign-up begins one hour before playing time. No Cash
- Play for Prizes and Points. Great chance to learn the
hottest game around
IBT’s -Troy’s Recovery Bar noon-4pm. 4-7:30
Karaoke on the patio. Benefit B-B-Q for the Pride
Parade 5:30-7:30 and dance with DJ Mike Lopez 9pm
to close.
VENTURE-N - Open 10am. Patio open 3pm.
$2.00 Bloody Marys or Screws til 3pm Patio Beer Bust
3-7.Burger BBQ 5-7. Selection of burger meats to
choose from. $3 proceeds go to Pet Watch (helping
HIV/AIDS clients with their veterinary bills).
WOODY’S - Open 11am. Brunch $5, 11:30 2:30. Patio open 1pm-close. Yard games on the grass.
Beer Bust 16oz $1 2-7p. $2.50 Sirloin Burger or
Chicken w/sides 5-9pm. Karaoke with Michael D. 9pmclose. Drag Bingo every other Sunday 8-9
YARD DOG - Open 10am - 2am. Patio Bar
opens at 5pm.
COLORS - Closed on Mondays
HOWL AT THE MOON –Open at 3 pm. Happy
Hour 3 - 8 pm, $2 well, domestic longnecks & pints, $3
sm pitchers, $5 lg pitchers. Kitchen open 4-9 pm with
reduced prices on appetizers - best deal in town! Free
Texas Hold-’Em Poker Tournaments at 6:00 pm and
9:00 pm. Sign-up begins one hour before playing time.
No Cash - Play for PrizesandPoints.
IBT’s -Open Noon. Happy Hour Noon-8pm, DJ
Craig Carter 10pm-2am $1.50 well vodka drinks, All
drink specials not available during special events.
VENTURE-N - Open 9am. Patio 6pm. Free
pool til 4pm. $2.75 Skyy & Beefeaters Martinis.
WOODY’S - Open 10am. w/Special Happy
Hour til 2pm $1.50 well or domestic longnecks. Regular
Happy Hour 2-8. Karaoke w/Michael D. 9-1
YARD DOG - Open daily 8am. 50¢ off any Top
Shelf Rum until 8pm. Beer Bust 4-8pm
COLORS - Open 4-11pm. Happy Hour 4-7 $3
Skyy cocktails, $2.25 Domestics and half-price
appetizers. Full menus served until l0pm.
HOWL AT THE MOON – Open at 3 pm. Happy
Hour 3 - 8 pm, $2 well, domestic longnecks & pints, $3
sm pitchers, $5 lg pitchers. Tequila Tuesday: $2.00
well margaritas, 50¢ off call tequilas. Kitchen open 49pm. Women-Only Texas Hold-Em P oker at 6:30 play
for prizes and points.
IBT’s - Open Noon. Happy Hour Noon-8pm,
Tropical Tuesdays $2.50 Tropical drinks and DJ Craig
Carter playing Retro Music 70’s, 80’s and 90’s 9pmclose.
VENTURE-N - Open 9am. Patio 6pm. Free
Pool til 4pm. Spaghetti Nite (2nd Tuesday every month
$2.00).
WOODY’S - Open 10am w/Special Happy
Hour til 2pm $1.50 well or domestic longneck. Regular
Happy Hour 2-8. 80s Nite 9-close. $1 off to those
wearing 80s concert T-shirt. (Excludes draught &
schnapps).
YARD DOG - Open daily 8am.50¢ off any
Top Shelf Tequila until 8pm Beer Bust 4-8pm.
COLORS - Open 4-11pm. Happy Hour 47pm, $3 Skyy cocktails, $2.25 Domestics and halfprice appetizers Full menu served 4-10pm. Nightly
dinner specials.
HOWL AT THE MOON – Open at 3 pm.
Happy Hour 3 - 8 pm, $2 well, domestic longnecks &
pints, $3 sm pitchers, $5 lg pitchers. Free Pool all
day. Draught Beer Specials all day. Kitchen open 49pm. Women-Only Texas Hold-Em Poker at 6:30.
Play for prizes and points
IBT’s - Open Noon. Happy Hour Noon-8pm,
“Diva-Licious” show 9pm w/ Bunny Fu Fu& Friends.
After show dance with DJ Q til 2am,
VENTURE-N - Open 8am. Patio 6pm. Free
Pool til 4pm. $2.75 Cuervo Margaritas 4-8pm
WOODY’S - Open 10am w/Special Happy
Hour til 2pm $1.50 well or domestic longnecks.
Regular Happy Hour 2-8. Underwear- fetish-leather
nite $1 off for those wearing underwear-fetish or
leather. (Excludes draught & schnapps) for all in
leather or underwear.
YARD DOG - Open daily 8am.50¢ off any
Top Shelf Vodka until 8pm Beer Bust 4-8pm.
JANUARY 18, 2006
COLORS - Open 4-11pm. Happy Hour 47pm,$3 Skyy cocktails, $2.25 Domestics and halfprice appetizers. Full menu served 4-10pm. Nightly
dinner specials.
HOWL AT THE MOON –Open at 3 pm.
Happy Hour 3 - 8 pm, $2 well, domestic longnecks &
pints, $3 sm pitchers, $5 lg pitchers. $2.00 Mexican
Beers all day. Kitchen open 4-9pm. Karaoke with
Debbie from 8 to midnight.
IBT’s -Open Noon. Happy Hour Noon-8pm,
Boyz Nite Out with your Bartenders & GoGo Boys
dancing in their undies and DJ Mike Lopez spinning
Top 40 & All request $1.75 Long Islands and $1.50
Tequila shots 10pm-2am.
VENTURE-N - Open 9am. Patio open 6pm.
Free Pool til 4pm. Pool Tourney 7pm. $3 entry.
Special prices for players. Steak Nite (4th Thursday
of each month). Bring your own or get it here $6.00.
WOODY’S - Open 10am w/Special Happy
Hour til 2pm $1.50 well or domestic longnecks.
Regular Happy Hour 2-8. Free Pool all day. NTN
Game Nite w/prizes 9-close. $1 Pabst Blue Ribbon.
Patio bar open 8pm-close
YARD DOG - Open daily 8am.50¢ off any
Top Shelf Bourbon til 8pm. Beer Bust 4-8pm. Patio
Bar opens 5pm.
COLORS - Open 4pm-1am. Happy Hour 47pm, $3 Skyy cocktails, $2.25 Domestics and halfprice appetizers . Full menu served 4-11pm. Nightly
Dinner Specials. 6:30-9:30pm. “Hot Jazz, Cool
Martinis” with Susan Artemis 10pm “Guys & Dolls”
hosted by Lucinda Holliday. Reservations suggested.
HOWL AT THE MOON – Open at 3 pm.
Happy Hour 3 - 8 pm, $2 well, domestic longnecks &
pints, $3 sm pitchers, $5 lg pitchers. Line Dance
Lessons 7:30 to 8:30 pm. DJ Pat plays your favorite
country dance songs 8:30 to midnight then a mix of
dance & country ‘til close. Kitchen open 4-9pm.
IBT’s - Open Noon. Happy Hour Noon-8pm,,
Hot Dance with DJ Mike Lopez 9pm-2am.
VENTURE-N - Open 9am. Patio open 6pm.
Free Pool til 4pm. DJ 9pm to close.
WOODY’S - Open 10am.w/Special Happy
Hour til-2pm $1.50 well or domestic longnecks.
Regular Happy Hour 2-8. Patio Bar open 8-close.
Party w/DJ Jeff 9-close.
YARD DOG - Open daily 8am.50¢ off any
Top Shelf Gin until 8pm. Beer Bust 4-8pm. Patio Bar
Opens 5pm
COLORS - Open 4pm-1am, Happy Hour 47pm, $3 Skyy cocktails, $2.25 Domestics and halfprice appetizers Full menu served 4-11pm. Nightly
dinner specials. Singer, piano player Marilyn Harris
performs during dinner from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Reservations suggested.
HOWL AT THE MOON –Open at 11:00 am.
Kitchen open til 9pm. Happy Hour 11am-8pm, $2
Well, domestic longnecks & pints, $3 small pitchers,
$5 large pitchers. $4.00 Cheeseburger & Fries all
day. DJ Johnny D playing your favorite dance &
country 9pm to close. Kitchen re-opens 9pm midnight for late night munchies.
IBT’s - Open Noon. Happy Hour Noon-8pm,
5-8pm karaoke and Teryaki Kabobs on the patio.
8:30pm Show time w/ Ajia Simone or Janee Star. DJ
Q spinning Club Music inside and Mike Lopez
spinning on the patio 10pm to close..
VENTURE-N - Open 9am. Patio Bar open
3pm. Patio Beer Bust 3-7pm. DJ 9 to close.
WOODY’S - Open 10am. Regular Happy
Hour 2-8. $5 Steak or Fish w/all the trimmings 5-9.
Patio Bar open 5-close. Live Jazz w/Arthur Migliazza
on the patio 6-9. Party w/DJ Jeff 9-close.
YARD DOG - Open daily 8am. Beer Bust 48pm. $1.25 glass, $2.25 pitcher. Patio Bar Opens
5pm.
WEEKLY OBSERVER
BAR CALENDAR
Of Upcoming Events
THURSDAY, JANUARY 12
WOODY’S - Black Light Party from 9:00 p.m. until
closing. Drink specials / Wear leather or White and
stand out!
FRIDAY, JANUARY 13
WOODY’S - January Birthday Celebration for all
those whose birthday is in January. 10:00 p.m.
Balloons - cake and champagne!!!
SUNDAY, JANUARY 15
WOODY’S - Drag Bingo at 8:00 p.m. Final game
prize will be a DVD Player.
TUESDAY, JANUARY 17
VENTURE-N - It’s a big “Hello and Goodbye” party
from 7:00 to 10:00 p.m. as Big Jim is retiring and
moving on with David and Tom taking up the reins.
Come celebrate with David and Tom! Fun, food,
drink specials and more!!!
SATURDAY, JANUARY 21
WOODY’S - Ski Weekend !! Just like Aspen. Don’t
miss out!!
SATURDAY, JANUARY 28
WOODY’S - Celebrate Chinese New Year’s - the
Year of the Dog.
YARD DOG SALOON - According to the Chinese
Calendar, the New Year is the ‘Year of the Dog’ - So
what more of an excuse to you need to throw a party?
Mark your calendars now
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29
WOODY’S - Still celebrating the Chinese New Year
‘Year of the Dog’ - Best Pooch Contest here at 3:00
p.m.
Girl Expelled Over SameSex Kiss Files Suit
Continued from Page Three
According to the Atlanta Journal Constitution, the off-campus slumber party took place Apr.
22. Four days later, Jessica and a few other girls were
called into McKinnon’s office and interrogated for
over an hour. Jessica, who was also accused of
sharing an earlier kiss with a different girl, was
expelled, despite her 3.5 grade point average. David
Clark said none of the other girls were expelled at the
time, although he was not sure whether or not anyone
else was subsequently disciplined.
Although the school handbook prohibits
“sexual immorality,” along with the usual high school
taboos, there is no explicit mention of same-sex
kissing. As for the policy against showing disregard
for the spirit of school standards, Bradley’s attorney
argues that the vague language in this and other
school regulations makes them unenforceable in
cases such as Jessica’s. “It’s unfair to the students,
because they don’t know what they can do to get
themselves expelled,” Clark said. The Bradleys have
since moved to Pennsylvania.
GLAAD Eye On The
Media
Continued from Page Seven
CASINOS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
AVA AMPHITHEATER AT CASINO DEL SOL
COMING ATTRACTIONS:(Box office 838-6700 -I-10
Exit Valencia West)
Feb. 26 - Brooks and Dunn (Tickets On Sale Now)
DESERT DIAMOND CASINO UPCOMING ATTRACTIONS: (Box office 393-2799 - I-19 & Pima
Mine Road, Exit 80 - 7 minutes south of Tucson)
HARRAH’S AK-CHIN CASINO RESORTFrom Tucson take I-10 West to Queen Creek Road (Exit 164),
turn left, drive 17 miles. Buses leave from Tucson
daily. Call (520)743-4386..Ride freee and get cash.
For more information 1-800-Harrahs or visit
www.harrahs.com
The GLAAD website carried an assertion
that instead of reviewing “Brokeback Mountain,”
which is my job, I “used the occasion to promote
defamatory anti-Gay prejudice to a national
audience.” This is untrue. It is unfair to me and must
be corrected. Everything in my life and in my family’s
life demonstrates beyond doubt that I am not
homophobic. Indeed, the contrary is true, and
everyone who knows me knows it. I certainly had no
intention of casting aspersions on anyone in the Gay
community or on the community itself. I regret any
emotional hurt that may have resulted from my review
of “Brokeback Mountain.”
WEEKLY OBSERVER
HALLELUJAH RECOVERY DRUG & ALCOHOL 12-STEP. Every Thursday 5:306:30pm at Cornerstone Fellowship, 2902 N.
Geronimo. 622-4626.
SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASE
CLINIC provided daily by the Pima County
Health Department. Gay friendly. Confidential. Treatment and Medication too! Any
questions? Call 624-8272
SOUTHERN ARIZONA AIDS FOUNDATION (SAAF), 375 S. EUCLID. Office Hours
8am to 5pm, Monday through Friday. Direct
services and emotional support for persons
with and affected by HIV. Anonymous HIV
testing and support groups available.
Prevention education programs. 628-SAAF
(7223). World wide web: http://www.saaf.org.
VOLUNTEERS WELCOME.
LESBIAN SUPPORT GROUP. Involving
discussion, support and activities. Designed to support each other. Meets 1st &
3rd Tuesday of each month from 6:30 to
8pm. Alternate Saturdays the group meets
for social activities. For info call Dorian
Easty. 882-7723 Facilitator.
P.F.L.A.G. - Parents and Friends of
Lesbians and Gays - is a support group
available to anyone who has a son,
daughter or friend who is Gay. Call 3603795 or write P.O. Box 36264, Tucson, AZ
85740-6264. All replies confidential.
GLBT-friendly AL-ANON group mets Saturdays at 11am at Unitarian Universalist
Church, 4831 E. 22nd Street, Tucson
YOUNG AND GAY?
GLBT Youth 23 and under, meet every
Saturday in Tucson for sharing, support and
information. Meetings are held at 425 E. 7th
Street from 3 to 4:30 pm. You are not alone.
For more info call Wingspan, 624-1779.
The TUCSON Chapter of PRIME TIMERS
WORLDWIDE invites Gay or Bisexual men
and their admirers to join and share Prime
Timers fellowship. We welcome mature
men (and admirers) who wish to become
involved with planned and future Prime
Timers (TPT) activities. Meetings luncheons and dinners are held monthly. For
dates, times and information call743-0810,
leave
name and phone number.
Tucsonpt@primetimersww,org
TUCSON GAY INFORMATION AND REFERRAL
For Information on human service organizations, health and mental health services,
financial and government assistance,
emergency services such as food and
shelter, education, etc. Call Information and
Referral 881-1794 - 8 am - 5 pm M-F.
AIDS HOTLINE - 326-AIDS. Hours M-F,
9:00 am to 10:00 pm. Information,
counseling, HIV-related services, Tucson.
GAY OR BI-SEXUAL MEN in relationships
with women. Need friends you can talk to?
Weekly support group meets Wednesdays
6:30 - 8:00 pm. Licensed psychologist
facilitator. Call 745-6977 in Tucson for more
information. Strictly confidential.
WINGSPAN - Tucson’s Gay, Lesbian &
Bisexual Community Center, 425 E. 7th St.,
offers support groups / info line / social
events / library / meeting space. Volunteer
Opportunities. Board meetings every 2nd
Thursday (open to all), 6:00 p.m. Information 624-1779.
GREATER PHOENIX GAY & LESBIAN
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE (GPGLCC)
P.O. BOX 2097, Phoenix, AZ 85001-2097.
E-mail: [email protected] or call
(602)225-8444.
JANUARY 18, 2006
to our general meetings/potlucks on the 2nd
Friday of every month, at 3202 E. 1st St. (the
“Ward 6" Office Bldg.) Just south of
Speedway & East of Country Club. PotLuck
Dinner begins at 6:30 and the monthly
meeting follows at 7:15 p.m.
LESBIAN AND GAY AL-ANON - Affected by
someone’s drinking? Meeting every Tuesday 8:45 to 9:45 p.m. at Lambda Center,
2940 E. Thomas, Phoenix. Ellie 581-8850
or Ronn 968-2384.
LEARN TO BE A LISTENING FRIEND
Unique Hospital Volunteer Program teaches
listening skills to Volunteers who provide a
safe/compassionate environment to at-risk
patients. Training every 6 weeks. 6947063.
CRONIES SOCIAL GROUP. A Social group
for Gay men who enjoy the fellowship of
their peers. Call Leo at 624-6768.
TUCSON INTERFAITH HIV/AIDS NETWORK (TIHAN), a coalition of faith
communities committed to a compassionate response to HIV/AIDS, provides HIV
education in congregational settings, volunteer CareTeams to support HIV+ persons, a
referral network of HIV-sensitive clergy, and
interfaith services of healing and hope. For
more information call 299-6647.
T-SQUARES Lesbian and Gay square
dance club meets every Tuesday from 6:309:00 p.m. at Cornerstone Fellowship Social
Hall, 2902 N. Geronimo (near 1st Ave. and
Laguna). Open to All. Call Liz at 325-9466 or
Ray at 749-5247.
ANONYMOUS HIV COUNSELING AND
TESTING is available through the Pima
County Health Department at sites throughout Tucson, Very Gay Friendly. For more
information or to make an appointment call
791-7676.
LIGHTNING LIGHTING will provide lighting
for AIDS and related benefits at no charge.
For more info call Adrienne at 889-7298.
GRACE GROUP - CATHOLIC GAY/
LESBIAN SUPPORT GROUP meets every
2nd and 4th Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the
Madonna Hall at Saints Peter and Paul
Catholic Church, 1436 N. Campbell across
from University Hospital. For more info. Call
Anabeli at 325-0892
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE GROUP - Outreach
to Gay and Lesbian people in Arizona.
Meets monthly. Write to P.O. Box 893,
Phoenix, AZ 85001 or call Eddy Walters,
(602)371-1102
COME EXPLORE YOUR SPIRITUALITY!
St. Philip’s in the Hills Episcopal Church
offers a variety of Gay and Lesbian groups
and services for the spiritually minded.
Come meet the Family! For more information call Debbie 579-9827 or David 3237943.
LESBIAN/GAY WRITERS: Workshop at
7:00 p.m. third Wednesday of every month.
Read and critique current projects. Network
and support. For info call 325-4737.
DESERT VOICES, Tucson’s Gay, Lesbian,
Bisexual, Transgender and Straight Chorus, has been singing songs of pride, hope
and laughter for 16 seasons. Check out our
website at www.desertvoices.org, or call
(520)791-9662 for information about upcoming concerts or how to join.
Join the LESBIAN & GAY PUBLIC
AWARENESS PROJECT. In Tucson write
Awareness Project, 3661 N. Campbell Ave.
#365, Tucson, AZ 85719.
AA Meeting with HIV/AIDS focus, Wednesdays, 7:30 p.m., Wingspan Annex, 425 E.
7th St. All alcoholics welcome.
MEN’S SOCIAL NETWORK: Social organization for men of all ages. Building an
extended Gay family in Tucson. Monthly
social potluck gatherings the first Saturday
of each month and almost weekly social
activities. Call 690-9565 for information and
a newsletter. Check the Non-Bar Calendar
in the Observer.
CARE TEAMS ARE AVAILABLE to offer
support to people living with HIV/AIDS. The
Tucson Interfaith HIV/AIDS Network offers
trained, compassionate and committed
volunteers to provide services including
friendly visits, light housekeeping, assistance with meals, shopping, errands,
transportation and companionship for
medical appointments, and respite care for
primary care givers. No judgement or
proselytizing - we are here to be of service.
For information call Scott at 299-6647.
FOR INFORMATION ABOUT SPORTS
TEAMS and updates on Gay Games 2002,
contract TEAM ARIZONA at their website:
teamarizona.org
SOURCES UNLIMITED, a Lesbian & Gay
referral service. Business and individual
listings are free of charge. All information
available to anyone just simply by asking.
322-5655.
Leave
message.
[email protected]
ARE YOU GAY OR BISEXUAL AND
UNDER 21 YEARS OF AGE? The Gay
Young Men’s Project is now looking for
volunteers for the project. We need people
who want to help create a positive social
change for young Gay men as well as
reduce the risk for HIV infection. For more
information please call 628-7223.
GET NAKED with TNTucson MEN! We’re a
social and recreational club. Have you ever
longed to camp, swim, hike or play with
others who enjoy the same, dropping all the
masks and pretensions? We;re for you!
[email protected], P.O. Box
12176, Tucson 85792 or call 514-9894
THE MEN’S MASSAGE GROUP meets the
3rd Sunday of each month. It is a good way
to meet other men of all ages, safely, and
with the art of nurturing touch. There is a fee.
You must sign up in advance to participate.
Call Marc at 881-4582 for more information
or sign up.
INNER WISDOM - Try hypnotherapy for
pain relief, past life exploration and
addiction release. Also available: Spiritual
Counseling and Dream Interpretation. 5799020
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE GLBT,
Tucson’s Gay and Lesbian business
networking group holds regular meetings
the third Thursday of every month. Call 6156436
for
more
info.
www.tucsonglbtchamber.org
BEARS OF THE OLD PUEBLO — a social
club for bears and bigger, more robust men
(and of course, those who prefer their
company). For more info, Call the Bears
Hotline (520)790-5775 or write P.O. Box
43910, Tucson, AZ 85733-3910 of visit our
website at www.botop.com All are welcome
vidual needs should be directed to
Wingspan and other local agencies listed
here. For more information call 622-3200 or
visit
the
TPI
website
at
www.tucsonpride.com
TUCSON PRIDE, INC. (Formerly Tucson
Lesbian and Gay Alliance - TLGA) meets on
the second Tuesday at 845 S. Craycroft
Road at 6pm. Tucson Pride events: Pride
Week, Gay West and OUToberFEST.
Inquiries about support groups and indi-
SMART (Self Management And Recovery
Training) a free non-12-step self-help
alternative for people working to overcome
addictive and other emotional problems
meets in Tucson Monday thru Thursdays at
different locations. For more information
about SMART, contact Jennifer at 8383975.
AZdykes is a new email list for Lesbians
living in Arizona. For information mail
[email protected] and request guidelines.
OUTLOUD! Tucson’s premiere Local Lesbian and Gay Radio Show, broadcast every
Sunday from 7-8 pm on 91.3 FM,
Community Radio KXCI.
THEATER / DINNER / MOVIES / ETC!
Nonsmoking Lesbian Network meets every
month. If you’d like to meet women 50+
(flexible) and socialize in a smoke-free
environment, please call or email: 888-8010
‘til 9pm, or [email protected]. The group
dines OUT! and attends shows, movies,
comedy events, etc. Now in our 23rd year,
7th in Tucson.
SOUTHERN ARIZONA GENDER ALLIANCE (SAGA). The Southwest’s largest
transgender and gender-diversity advocacy organization. Speakers and panelists
available. General meetings monthly on
the 1st Mondays at 7pm; Dezert Girlz (MTF
Support) meets 2nd Mondays at 7pm; Dezert
Boyz (FTM Support) meets 3rd Tuesdays at
7pm. Also serving partners, youth, intersex,
service providers and allies. Call (520)6241779 x26 for more info.
EDUCATIONAL SUPPORT GROUP FOR
ALTERNATIVE LIFESTYLES. Not a dating
club. Discreet. Meetings every Monday
evening. Call for more info. APEX (Arizona
Power Exchange) 602-415-1123. 24-hr
multi-choice message including information, calendar and location.
ARIZONA AIDS POLICY ALLIANCE
(AZAPA) seeks to educate legislators and
citizens about sound AIDS policy. For more
information write AZAPA, 6523 N. 14th St.,
#112, Phoenix, AZ 85014 or call 602-2794805.
DESERT DOMINION, whose focus is
providing information and education for
people interested in the BDSM lifestyle,
meets monthly for group discussion and
social events. Visit our web site http://
www.desertdominion.org or call (520)7926424
SEXUAL ASSAULT SURVIVORS. Starting
this February, the Tucson Rape crisis
Center will be providing free confidential
group services for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual
and Transgender survivors of all manner of
sexual assault. Interested persons please
call Mirto Stone, MSW, at 327-1171 (if
unavailable leave message with phone
number.
AAPSP - ARIZONA ASSOCIATION OF
PUBLIC SAFETY PROFESSIONALS: a
confidential organization committed to
providing support and networking for all
Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual public safety
professionals in Arizona. Membership open
to Law Enforcement Officers, Firefighters,
Probation, Parole and Corrections Officers
and civilians working within these agencies.
Website: AAPSP.org or e-mail:
[email protected] or call Dave (520)745-
PAGE NINETEEN
9059 (Tucson) or Kim (602)534-6219
(Phoenix)
TUCSON CATHOLIC GAY & LESBIAN
FAMILY MINISTRY. Currently meeting the
4th Monday of every month at SS Peter &
Paul Church, Madonna Hall 7:30 p.m. to
9:00 p.m. Fr. Fiedler in attendance every
meeting and willing to speak one on one.
Reaching out to Parents and Families. For
more info call Doc or Barbara 293-6624.
SAA (Sex Addicts Anonymous) has 5
meetings a week in Tucson. People who
wish to stop their compulsive sexual
behavior, please call (520) 745-0775 for
current information.
TUCSON GREATER SOFTBALL ASSOCIATION. Interested? Call Kelly Quinn,
(520)906-0669 and or Mona Garcia 2568728.
LUTHERANS CONCERNED — Tucson
chapter for Gay/Lesbian Lutherans meets
3rd Sunday, 6:30 p.m. each month at Santa
Cruz Lutheran Church, 6809 S. Cardinal
Ave. For information visit www.lctucson.org
write: LC, 7014 E. Golf Links Road, PMB
212, Tucson, AZ 85730.
REVEILLE GAY MEN’S CHORUS rehearses Tuesdays 7-10pm at MCC Church,
3269 N. Mountain. Have any history/
experience singing? Join us!! Call 617-3100
for more info.
“OUT ON THE TRAILS - EQUESTRIAN FUN!”
Rider Club forming. Looking for women and
men to ride together on the trails of Southern
Arizona. Must have own horse, truck and
trailer. For more info write: “Out On The
Trails” P.O. Box 44045, Tucson, AZ 857334045
LIKE TO READ?
The Guys’ Book Club (TGBC) invites new
members to join us. The group meets once a
month, on the 3rd Monday, at 6:30 p.m.
Reading selections include Gay-themed
novels, bios and other nonfiction. For
location or more info, email Bryan at
[email protected]
THE MAN TO MAN Social/erotic education
club is the tantric men’s group that offers
passionate friendships, fun activities and
real Tantric sex education. Marc 881-4582
LGBT BUDDHIST MEDITATION GROUP.
Join us for two 20 minute silent sitting
meditations, and reading from Buddhist
spiritual text and discussion. Bring a friend
and a pillow or cushion. Takes place every
Sunday from 10:00 - 11:30am at Wingspan,
425 E. 7th St.. Contact Maurice Grossman
for more info. 323-2293.
LGBT SUPPORT GROUP FOR VICTIM/
SURVIVORS OF Domestic Violence, Sexual
Assault, Hate Crimes, Bias Acts, Harassment. Call Lori at Wingspan, 624-1779, ext.
20. Services are free.
NEW TUCSON SOBRIETY SUPPORT
GROUP. Secular Organizations for Sobriety - Sundays 8:00 - 9:30 p.m. at 739 N. 4th
Avenue. Contacts Rick R. 520-792-2604 or
Gary S. 520-323-1969. More information at
www.secularhumanism.org/sos/ This group
is an alternative to 12-step programs.
MEN’S KINK DISCUSSION GROUP (Open
to all who identify as male and are 18 or
older) meets 2nd Tuesday of the month, 7:00
p.m. at Desert Dominion, 3843 E. 37th Street,
Tucson,
(Map available at
www.desertdominion,org) For those who
are kinky or just curious. No fee,
contributions are appreciated, but not
required.
SUN WORSHIPERS OF TUCSON (SWOT)
is a local men’s nudist organization for men
of all ages. Events feature swimming, hot
tubbing and socializing in a relaxed, private
setting
MAN TO MAN INTENTIONAL COMMUNITY FORMING for anyone wanting quality
friendships, better health and more passion
in their lives. This group has far-reaching
benefits for those who want to explore their
own spirituality, sexuality and purpose in life.
Contact Marc Haberman, Holistic Health
Practitioner at 881-4582.
JANUARY 18, 2006
PAGE TWENTY
California ‘Gay Panic’ Bill
One Step Closer To Reality
SACRAMENTO - Legislation
that would limit the use of the “Gay
panic” defense in criminal court cases
cleared a California legislative committee on Tuesday, (Jan. 10) moving
one step closer to passage, reported
the PlanetOut Network. Named the
Gwen Araujo Justice for Victims Act,
the legislation would amend jury
instructions to say that the use of
societal bias to influence a criminal
trial is inconsistent with California
public policy, specifically hate-crime
laws.
The act, sponsored by Gay
advocacy group Equality California
and introduced by Assemblywoman
Sally Lieber, passed the assembly
public safety committee by a 4–2 vote.
“We should not allow criminal defendants to blame their victims,” Lieber
said. “We prohibit discrimination
based on race, religion, gender, and
sexual orientation in nearly all areas
of public life. Why should we allow
killers to use bias and intolerance as a
The label also comes as
Wilderness Media plans this weekend
to launch a syndicated national radio
show called Twist, targeting gay and
“gay-adjacent” communities, debuting on FM stations and the Web. The
weekly two-hour radio show will
feature music, celebrity interviews,
entertainment reports, and relationship and lifestyle advice and news in a
“morning show” format. “It’s an idea
whose time has come,” Farber told
Reuters, referring to the expansion of
gay-themed media properties. “Only
now are media and entertainment
brands being created for the gay and
Lesbian audience following the success of brands for other minorities,”
he said.
Farber noted that the success
of brands dedicated to AfricanAmerican and Hispanic audiences
have also helped talent in these
communities cross over well beyond
their core audiences. Likewise, Music
With a Twist’s roster will feature gay
artists who have mass appeal and hit
potential across all musical genres.
The label will collaborate with Sony
Music’s other U.S. labels and divisions, including Columbia Records
Group, Epic Records, Sony Nashville,
and Sony Urban Music. Sony Music is
part of Sony BMG, a joint venture of
Sony Corp and Bertelsmann AG. The
label also plans to release various
compilations geared toward gay and
Bisexual audiences, as well as music
fans everywhere, featuring hit songs
by established artists that have been
embraced by gay, Bisexual, and
Transgender audiences as well as
tracks from emerging gay artists. The
Two More NBC Affiliates Close
The Book On Daniel
NEW YORK - Two more NBC
affiliates chose not to air the network’s
new drama The Book of Daniel, which
features an Episcopal priest with a Gay
son, the network said Friday (Jan. 13),
reported the Associated Press on
Advocate.com. Four affiliates nationally
have rejected the series, and conservative Christian groups have campaigned
against it.
Gwen Araujo
justification for murder?”
The legislation will now go
before California’s full assembly. The
bill is named after a Transgender
California teen brutally murdered in
2002. In a 2004 trial that was later
declared a mistrial, lawyers of the three
men accused of attacking and killing
Araujo asserted that the defendants
“panicked” after learning Araujo was a
Transgender person. (Advocate.com)
Sony To Cultivate LGBT Artists
LOS ANGELES - The recording
industry is coming out of the closet
when Sony Music on Tuesday (Jan.
10) said it was launching the first
major music label dedicated to
nurturing Lesbian, gay, Bisexual, and
Transgender artists, reported Reuters
on Advocate.com. The label, Music
With a Twist, is a joint venture with
Wilderness Media & Entertainment,
the company led by Matt Farber, who
founded Viacom Inc.’s MTV Networks’ new gay and Lesbian channel,
Logo, which is available in an
estimated 20 million homes.
WEEKLY OBSERVER
first of these compilations will be
released in June 2006 during National
Gay Pride Month.
KBTV in Beaumont, Texas, and
WGBC in Meridian, Miss., were the
latest stations to reject the series.
Earlier, NBC affiliates KARK in Little
Rock, Ark., and WTWO in Terre Haute,
Ind., said they wouldn’t air it.
NBC has 230 affiliates nationally, and a spokeswoman noted that the
four affiliates make up less than 1% of
NBC’s national audience. The series
stars Aidan Quinn as the Reverend
Daniel Webster and depicts him as
talking regularly with Jesus Christ.
All-Gay I’ve Got A Secret Coming
NEW YORK - The Game Show
Network announced Thursday (Jan.
12) that it will begin airing a revival of
the classic show I’ve Got a Secret on
Apr. 17, reported Advocate.com.
The twist for this new version
is that everyone on the panel of
celebrities is openly Gay.
Doing their best to guess the
secrets of contestants will be radio
host Frank DeCaro, comedian Suzanne
Westenhoefer, retired major league
baseball player Billy Bean, and
Broadway performer Jermaine Taylor.
Burt Dubrow Productions will produce
the show, which will be hosted by Bil
Dwyer (Extreme Dodgeball, I Love the
80s).